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Isolated black holes without mathbb{Z}₂ isometry
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A mechanism to construct asymptotically flat, isolated, stationary black hole (BH) spacetimes with no $\mathbb{Z}_2$ (No$\mathbb{Z}$) isometry is described. In particular, the horizon geometry of such No$\mathbb{Z}$ BHs does not have the usual north-south (reflection) symmetry. We discuss two explicit families of models wherein No$\mathbb{Z}$ BHs arise. In one of these families, we exhibit the intrinsic horizon geometry of an illustrative example by isometrically embedding it in Euclidean 3-space, resulting in an "egg-like" shaped horizon. This asymmetry leaves an imprint in the No$\mathbb{Z}$ BH phenomenology, for instance in its lensing of light; but it needs not be manifest in the BH shadow, which in some cases can be analytically shown to retain a $\mathbb{Z}_2$ symmetry. Light absorption and scattering due to an isotropic source surrounding a No$\mathbb{Z}$ BH endows it with a non-zero momentum, producing an asymmetry triggered BH rocket effect.
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Cited by 1 Pith paper
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Twisted doughnuts: Thick disk torus around equatorial asymmetric black hole
Equatorial asymmetry in black hole spacetimes twists thick tori, displacing their centers and cusps away from the equatorial plane in the same direction as Keplerian orbits.
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