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Particle acceleration around rotating Einstein-Born-Infeld black hole and plasma effect on gravitational lensing

Authors :
Shafqat Ul Islam
Farruh Atamurotov
Gulmina Zaman Babar
Sushant G. Ghosh
Source :
Physical Review D. 103
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Physical Society (APS), 2021.

Abstract

We consider a time-like geodesics in the background of rotating Einstein-Born-Infeld (EBI) black hole to examine the horizon and ergosphere structure. The effective potential that governs the particle's motion in the spacetime and the innermost stable circular orbits (ISCO) is also studied. A qualitative analysis is conducted to find the redshifted ultrahigh centre-of-mass (CM) energy as a result of a two-particle collision specifically near the horizon. The recent Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) triggered a surge of interest in strong gravitational lensing by black holes, which provide a new tool comparing the black hole lensing in general relativity and alternate gravity theories. Motivated by this, we also discussed both strong and weak-field gravitational lensing in the space-time discretely for a uniform plasma and a singular isothermal sphere. We calculated the light deflection coefficients $\bar{a}$ and $\bar{b}$ in the strong field limits, and their variance with the rotational parameter $a$ for different plasma frequency as well as in vacuum. For EBI black holes, we found that plasma's presence increases the photon sphere radius, the deflection angle, the deflection coefficients $\bar{a}$, $\bar{b}$, the angular positions and the angular separation between the relativistic images. It is also shown that with increasing spin the impact of plasma on a strong gravitational lensing becomes smaller as the spin parameter grows in the prograde orbit ($a>0$). For extreme black holes, the strong gravitational effects in the homogenous plasma are similar to those of in a vacuum. We investigate strong gravitational lensing effects by supermassive black holes Sgr A* and M87*...<br />22 pages, 14 figures

Details

ISSN :
24700029 and 24700010
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical Review D
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a4a53e6f57baf708acedc75fcb759ba2