The effects of asymptotically flat $R^2$ spacetime on black hole image of Sagittarius A* (2504.10956v2)
Abstract: A new class of analytically expressible vacuum solutions has recently been discovered for pure ${R}2$ gravity, building upon Buchdahl's seminal work from 1962. These solutions, inspired by Buchdahl's framework, offer a promising avenue for testing ${R}2$ gravity against astrophysical observations. Within a subset of asymptotically flat Buchdahl-inspired vacuum spacetimes, we introduce a free parameter $\epsilon$ to characterize deviations from the Schwarzschild metric, which is recovered in the limit $\epsilon = 0$. In this study, we employ the publicly available code \textit{ipole} to simulate black hole images under the Buchdahl-inspired metric, with a focus on the black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*). Our simulations show that both the shadow size and photon ring diameter decrease monotonically with increasing $\epsilon$. By exploring a range of observational inclination angles, we find that the photon ring diameter being a direct observable is only weakly sensitive to the inclination angle. We further constrain the parameter $\epsilon$ by comparing our simulation results with the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) observations of Sgr A*. The obtained bounds are consistent with those previously derived from the orbital motion of the S2 star, but provide tighter constraints. In addition, we analyze the influence of the Buchdahl-inspired spacetime on the polarization patterns near the black hole and find its impact to be minimal. In contrast, the observational inclination angle has a substantial effect on the observed polarization structure, highlighting the dominant role of viewing geometry in shaping polarization features.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.