J 2025

Bose-Einstein condensates near charged noncommutative inspired black holes

MARDONOV, Shukhrat; Javlon RAYIMBAEV; Farukh ABDULKHAMIDOV; Eldor KARIMBAEV; Bakhrom ABDULAZIZOV et al.

Basic information

Original name

Bose-Einstein condensates near charged noncommutative inspired black holes

Authors

MARDONOV, Shukhrat; Javlon RAYIMBAEV; Farukh ABDULKHAMIDOV; Eldor KARIMBAEV and Bakhrom ABDULAZIZOV

Edition

Classical and Quantum Gravity, GB - Spojené království Velké Británie a, 2025, 0264-9381

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Field of Study

10308 Astronomy

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 3.700 in 2024

Organization unit

Institute of physics in Opava

UT WoS

001492456700001

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-105006491938

Keywords in English

Bose-Einstein condensate;black holes;non-commutativity;Gross-Pitaevskii-like equation

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 27/1/2026 09:40, Mgr. Pavlína Jalůvková

Abstract

In the original language

In the present work, we investigate the Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs) on electrically charged noncommutative-inspired (NCi) black holes (BHs). The NC parameter represents a quantum correction that modifies spacetime geometry by introducing a minimal length scale. This impacts the BH's effective gravitational field and, consequently, the dynamics of nearby scalar fields. The BEC is represented by a massive scalar field governed by the Klein-Gordon equation with a self-interaction term, assuming the scalar field is uncharged and devoid of self-gravitation and the mass parameter of the scalar field to be sufficiently small that may allow conditions to be a candidate for dark-matter clouds. We start our study by analyzing the properties of the event horizon and the mass profiles of NCi BH inside it. The BH charge and the NC parameters, Q/M-Theta/M2, space are also studied. Then, we analyze the effective potential of a test scalar field in both radial and tortoise coordinates for the different values of the BH charge, the NC, and the scalar field mass parameters. Finally, we study the density function in the Thomas-Fermi approximation, in which the condensate is located in a spherical shell. The parameters Q and Theta can slightly modify the condensed density distribution.