Trapping of null geodesics in slowly rotating extremely compact Tolman VII spacetimes

Abstract

Region of trapped null geodesics hidden inside of extremely compact objects is of astrophysical importance because of trapping of gravitational waves, or neutrinos. The trapping effect of null geodesics was extensively studied for spherically symmetric extremely compact objects. Recently, influence of rotation of the extremely compact objects on the trapping of null geodesics was treated in the simplest possible model of internal linearised Hartle--Thorne spacetime with uniform energy density distribution and uniform emissivity distribution of null geodesics. Here we extend the study of the rotation influence on the trapping effect in the case of linearized Hartle--Thorne spacetimes based on the Tolman VII spherically symmetric solutions, where we assume the emissivity of the null geodesics proportional to the energy density of the Tolman VII object having quadratic radial profile. We demonstrate enhancement (suppression) of the trapping effect in the case of counter-rotating (co-rotating) null geodesics due to the behavior of the effective potentials and escape cones of the null geodesics in the linearised Hartle--Thorne--Tolman VII spacetimes. In dependence on the parameters of these spacetimes we determine the "local" and "global" coefficients of efficiency of the trapping and compare the results to those related to the rotating spacetimes based on the internal Schwarzschild spacetimes. We demonstrate that in the Tolman VII spacetimes the trapping is more efficient, being allowed in objects with radii larger than those of the trapping internal Schwarzschild spacetimes, occurring even for R>3.3M.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…