Igata, Takahisa, Omamiuda, Motoki, Takamori, Yohsuke
2025年2月17日
In this paper, we investigate the gravitational lensing and accretion disk
imaging characteristics of a dense core modeled by the Buchdahl spacetime. By
imposing the appropriate energy conditions and ensuring the absence of
curvature singularities, we delineate the parameter space in which the dense
core mimics key gravitational features of black holes while exhibiting unique
deviations. We derive the photon orbital equation and calculate deflection
angles, clearly distinguishing between weak- and strong-deflection regimes.
Furthermore, we construct a mapping from the illuminated, geometrically thin
accretion disk onto the observer's screen -- focusing on the isoradial curves
corresponding to a representative source ring. For compactness values below a
critical threshold, only a finite number of disk images are formed. In this
range, their secondary and higher-order images typically display double-loop
structures, with each loop individually capturing the entire source ring.
Notably, the highest-order image sometimes appears as a single, crescent-shaped
loop that does not enclose the screen's center, implying the existence of a
cutoff angle that restricts the imaged portion of the source ring. In contrast,
for compactness values above the critical threshold, an infinite sequence of
double-loop structures appears -- a behavior closely linked to the presence of
a photon sphere. These findings suggest that the lensing signatures of dense
cores can distinguish them from black holes, offering new insights for
high-resolution observations.