4.8 Article

Twisting of light around rotating black holes

Journal

NATURE PHYSICS
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages 195-197

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NPHYS1907

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Funding

  1. CARIPARO Foundation
  2. Swedish Research Council (VR)

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Kerr black holes are among the most intriguing predictions of Einstein's general relativity theory(1,2). These rotating massive astrophysical objects drag and intermix their surrounding space and time, deflecting and phase-modifying light emitted near them. We have found that this leads to a new relativistic effect that imprints orbital angular momentum on such light. Numerical experiments, based on the integration of the null geodesic equations of light from orbiting point-like sources in the Kerr black hole equatorial plane to an asymptotic observer(3), indeed identify the phase change and wavefront warping and predict the associated light-beam orbital angular momentum spectra(4). Setting up the best existing telescopes properly, it should be possible to detect and measure this twisted light, thus allowing a direct observational demonstration of the existence of rotating black holes. As non-rotating objects are more an exception than a rule in the Universe, our findings are of fundamental importance.

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