Vector Horndeski black holes in nonlinear electrodynamics

Abstract

On a spherically symmetric and static background, we study the existence of linearly stable black hole (BH) solutions in nonlinear electrodynamics (NED) with a Horndeski vector-tensor (HVT) coupling, with and without curvature singularities at the center (r=0). Incorporating the electric charge qE and the magnetic charge qM, we first show that nonsingular BHs can exist only if qM = 0. We then study the stability of purely electric BHs by analyzing the behavior of perturbations in the metric and the vector field. Nonsingular electric BHs are unstable due to a Laplacian instability in the vector perturbation near the regular center. In the absence of the HVT coupling (β=0), singular BHs in power-law NED theories can be consistent with all linear stability conditions, while Born-Infeld BHs encounter strong coupling due to a vanishing propagation speed as r 0. In power-law NED and Born-Infeld theories with β ≠ 0, the electric fields for singular BHs are regular near r=0, while the metric functions behave as r-1. Nevertheless, we show that Laplacian instabilities occur for regions inside the outer horizon rh, unless the HVT coupling constant β is significantly smaller than rh2. For β ≠ 0, we also reconstruct the NED Lagrangian so that one of the metric functions takes the Reissner-Nordstr\"om form. In this case, there exists a branch where all squared propagation speeds are positive, but the ghost and strong coupling problems are present around the BH center. Thus, the dominance of the HVT coupling generally leads to BH instability in the high-curvature regime.

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