Exotic compact objects, horizonless spacetimes with reflective properties,
have intriguingly been suggested by some quantum-gravity models as alternatives
to classical black-hole spacetimes. A remarkable feature of spinning
horizonless compact objects with reflective boundary conditions is the
existence of a {\it discrete} set of critical surface radii,
{rc(aˉ;n)}n=1n=∞, which can support spatially
regular static ({\it marginally-stable}) scalar field configurations (here
aˉ≡J/M2 is the dimensionless angular momentum of the exotic
compact object). Interestingly, the outermost critical radius
rcmax≡maxn{rc(aˉ;n)}
marks the boundary between stable and unstable exotic compact objects: spinning
objects whose reflecting surfaces are situated in the region
rc>rcmax(aˉ) are stable, whereas spinning
objects whose reflecting surfaces are situated in the region
rc<rcmax(aˉ) are superradiantly unstable
to scalar perturbation modes. In the present paper we use analytical techniques
in order to explore the physical properties of the critical (marginally-stable)
spinning exotic compact objects. In particular, we derive a remarkably compact
{\it analytical} formula for the discrete spectrum
{rcmax(aˉ)} of critical radii which characterize
the marginally-stable exotic compact objects. We explicitly demonstrate that
the analytically derived resonance spectrum agrees remarkably well with
numerical results that recently appeared in the physics literature.Comment: 9 page