Abstract

The apparent angular size of the shadow of a black hole in an expanding Universe is redshift-dependent. Since cosmological redshifts change with time - known as the redshift drift - all redshift-dependent quantities acquire a time dependence, and _a fortiori_ so do black hole shadows. We find a mathematical description of the black hole shadow drift and show that the amplitude of this effect is of order $10^{-16}$ per day for M87$^{\star}$. While this effect is small, we argue that its non-detection can be used to constrain the accretion rate around supermassive black holes, as well as a novel probe of the equivalence principle. If general relativity is assumed, we infer from the data obtained by the Event Horizon Telescope for M87$^{\star}$ a maximum accretion rate of $|\dot{M}/{M}| \leq 10^5 M_{\odot}$ per year. On the other hand, in the case of an effective gravitation coupling, we derive a constraint of $|\dot{G}/G| \leq 10^{-3}-10^{-4}$ per year. The effect of redshift drift on the visibility amplitude and frequency of the universal interferometric signatures of photon rings is also discussed, which we show to be very similar to the shadow drift. This is of particular interest for future experiments involving spectroscopic and interferometric techniques, which could make observations of photon rings and their frequency drifts viable.

Highlights

  • Redshift is an omnipresent Doppler-effect-related quantity, used in cosmology to build meaningful spatial and temporal distances

  • The main purpose of this work was to quantify the impact of cosmological drift on three important black hole physics observables: the black hole shadow’s apparent angular diameter, the visibility, and the frequency of its photon rings

  • The visibility amplitude and frequency inferred from interferometric universal signatures of photon rings are mostly determined by the ring diameter, which could potentially be a source of cosmological information, as discussed in Ref. [50]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Redshift is an omnipresent Doppler-effect-related quantity, used in cosmology to build meaningful spatial and temporal distances. Optimistic estimates show that these facilities could reach a precision of 10−10, for example with monitoring programs of 1000 hours of exposure with a 40-meter telescope [7] For this reason, cosmology with redshift drifts is an active field of research [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20], which we advance further with this work, in which we investigate how the cosmological drift would affect the image from black hole shadows and interferometric signatures from black holes’ photon rings. We show that it can be used in modified gravity models, as another probe of the equivalence principle

Schwarzschild black hole in an expanding universe
Shadow drift
Shadow drift of M87
SHADOW DRIFT AS A PROBE OF THE EQUIVALENCE PRINCIPLE AND OF ACCRETION RATES
RING VISIBILITY AMPLITUDE AND FREQUENCY DRIFTS
CONCLUSIONS AND DISCUSSION
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