2024
			
	    
	
	
    Particle motion around luminous neutron stars: Effects of deviation from Schwarzschild spacetime
VIEIRA, Ronaldo S S and Maciek WIELGUSBasic information
Original name
Particle motion around luminous neutron stars: Effects of deviation from Schwarzschild spacetime
	Authors
VIEIRA, Ronaldo S S and Maciek WIELGUS (616 Poland, belonging to the institution)
			Edition
 Physical Review D, 2024, 2470-0010
			Other information
Language
English
		Type of outcome
Article in a journal
		Field of Study
10308 Astronomy
		Country of publisher
United States of America
		Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
		References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 5.300
			RIV identification code
RIV/47813059:19630/24:A0000384
		Organization unit
Institute of physics in Opava
			UT WoS
001371243900021
		EID Scopus
2-s2.0-85203587460
		Keywords in English
trajectories of test particles;neutron stars;Reissner-Nordstrom spacetime;harged spherical object;Kehagias-Sfetsos spacetime;x-ray bursts
		Tags
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
		
				
				Changed: 3/3/2025 11:38, Mgr. Pavlína Jalůvková
				
		Abstract
In the original language
We study trajectories of test particles around a luminous, static, spherically symmetric neutron star, under the combined influence of gravity and radiation. In general relativity, for Schwarzschild spacetime, an equilibrium sphere (the Eddington capture sphere) is formed for near-Eddington luminosities. We generalize these results to a broad class of static, spherical spacetimes. We also study the dynamics of particles in a strong radiation field in spherical spacetimes. The results are illustrated for two cases, Reissner-Nordstrom spacetime of a charged spherical object in general relativity and Kehagias-Sfetsos spacetime, arising from the Ho.rava-Lifshitz gravity theory. Our findings apply to neutron stars under gravitational field equations different from the vacuum Einstein field equations of general relativity, such as in modified theories of gravity, the only requirement being that test particles follow geodesics in the absence of the radiation field. The effects that we describe are, in principle, measurable through observations of x-ray bursts of neutron stars. Hence, detailed future studies could use such observations to test gravity theories in the strong-field regime, provided that the impact of the spacetime geometry can be disentangled from the astrophysical uncertainties.