14–18 Nov 2022
America/Guayaquil timezone

Black holes: on the universality of the Kerr hypothesis

17 Nov 2022, 09:00
50m
Casa Blanca theater (USFQ main campus)

Casa Blanca theater

USFQ main campus

Plenary invited presentation Cosmology and gravitation Plenary session

Speaker

Prof. Carlos Herdeiro (Aveiro University and CIDMA)

Description

To what extent are all astrophysical, dark, compact objects both black holes (BHs) and described by the Kerr geometry? We embark on the exercise of defying the universality of this remarkable idea, often called the "Kerr hypothesis". After establishing its rationale and timeliness, we define a minimal set of reasonability criteria for alternative models of dark compact objects. Then, as proof of principle, we discuss concrete, dynamically robust non-Kerr BHs and horizonless imitators, that 1) pass the basic theoretical, and in particular dynamical, tests, 2) match (some of the) state of the art astrophysical observables and 3) only emerge at some (macroscopic) scales. These examples illustrate how the universality (at all macroscopic scales) of the Kerr hypothesis can be challenged.

Author

Prof. Carlos Herdeiro (Aveiro University and CIDMA)

Presentation materials

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