Untwisting the double copy: the zeroth copy as an optical seed
Abstract
We present a historical optical foundation for stationary vacuum Kerr--Schild spacetimes on a flat background and interpret it in modern double-copy language. In this setting, a complex optical seed \(ρ=-θ-iω\), built from the expansion and signed twist of the Kerr--Schild congruence, is harmonic, while its inverse obeys an eikonal equation and reconstructs the congruence algebraically. Thus the local stationary geometry is organized by a single complex seed. In the overlap of the stationary Kerr--Schild and Petrov type--D Weyl double-copy framework, this seed furnishes a normalized representative of the zeroth-copy data, while its real part yields the Kerr--Schild profile and its gradient generates the single-copy gauge-field strength. The construction provides, without recourse to twistor methods, a spacetime realization of how a single complex seed builds the congruence, organizes the associated spacetime and gauge fields, and encodes the geometric content of the zeroth copy.
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