|
A. N. Lasenby, C. J. L. Doran, Y. Dabrowski and A. D. Challinor.
Rotating astrophysical systems and a gauge theory approach to
gravity
In N. Sanchez and A. Zichini, editors, Current Topics in Astrofundamental
Physics, Erice 1996. (World Scientific Publishing Co., 1997)p.
380-403.
Abstract: We discuss three applications of a gauge theory
of gravity to rotating astrophysical systems. The theory employs
gauge fields in a flat Minkowski background spacetime to describe
gravitational interactions. The iron fluorescence line observed
in AGN is discussed, assuming that the line originates from matter
in an accretion disk around a Kerr (rotating) black hole. Gauge-theory
gravity, expressed in the language of Geometric Algebra, allows
very efficient numerical calculation of photon paths. From these
paths we are able to infer the line shape of the iron line. Comparison
with observational data allows us to constrain the black hole parameters,
and, for the first time, infer an emissivity profile for the accretion
disk. The topological constraints imposed by gauge-theory gravity
are exploited to investigate the nature of the Kerr singularity.
This reveals a simple physical picture of a ring of matter moving
at the speed of light which surrounds a sheet of pure isotropic
tension. Implications for the end-points of collapse processes are
discussed. Finally we consider rigidly-rotating cosmic strings.
It is shown that a solution in the literature has an unphysical
stress-energy tensor on the axis. Well defined solutions are presented
for an ideal two-dimensional fluid. The exterior vacuum solution
admits closed timelike curves and exerts a confining force.
pdf, postscript
|