Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole

Abstract From any location outside the event horizon of a black hole there are an infinite number of trajectories for light to an observer. Each of these paths differ in the number of orbits revolved around the black hole and in their proximity to the last photon orbit. With simple numerical and a p...

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Main Author: Albert Snepppen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93595-w
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spelling doaj-95db5c4350164f06a6074f9db0c7cec42021-07-11T11:29:58ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-07-011111810.1038/s41598-021-93595-wDivergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black holeAlbert Snepppen0Niels Bohr Institute, University of CopenhagenAbstract From any location outside the event horizon of a black hole there are an infinite number of trajectories for light to an observer. Each of these paths differ in the number of orbits revolved around the black hole and in their proximity to the last photon orbit. With simple numerical and a perturbed analytical solution to the null-geodesic equation of the Schwarzschild black hole we will reaffirm how each additional orbit is a factor $$e^{2 \pi }$$ e 2 π closer to the black hole’s optical edge. Consequently, the surface of the black hole and any background light will be mirrored infinitely in exponentially thinner slices around the last photon orbit. Furthermore, the introduced formalism proves how the entire trajectories of light in the strong field limit is prescribed by a diverging and a converging exponential. Lastly, the existence of the exponential family is generalized to the equatorial plane of the Kerr black hole with the exponentials dependence on spin derived. Thereby, proving that the distance between subsequent images increases and decreases for respectively retrograde and prograde images. In the limit of an extremely rotating Kerr black hole no logarithmic divergence exists for prograde trajectories.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93595-w
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Albert Snepppen
spellingShingle Albert Snepppen
Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
Scientific Reports
author_facet Albert Snepppen
author_sort Albert Snepppen
title Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
title_short Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
title_full Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
title_fullStr Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
title_full_unstemmed Divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
title_sort divergent reflections around the photon sphere of a black hole
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract From any location outside the event horizon of a black hole there are an infinite number of trajectories for light to an observer. Each of these paths differ in the number of orbits revolved around the black hole and in their proximity to the last photon orbit. With simple numerical and a perturbed analytical solution to the null-geodesic equation of the Schwarzschild black hole we will reaffirm how each additional orbit is a factor $$e^{2 \pi }$$ e 2 π closer to the black hole’s optical edge. Consequently, the surface of the black hole and any background light will be mirrored infinitely in exponentially thinner slices around the last photon orbit. Furthermore, the introduced formalism proves how the entire trajectories of light in the strong field limit is prescribed by a diverging and a converging exponential. Lastly, the existence of the exponential family is generalized to the equatorial plane of the Kerr black hole with the exponentials dependence on spin derived. Thereby, proving that the distance between subsequent images increases and decreases for respectively retrograde and prograde images. In the limit of an extremely rotating Kerr black hole no logarithmic divergence exists for prograde trajectories.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93595-w
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