pith. sign in

arxiv: 2605.23732 · v1 · pith:HXSFSLJUnew · submitted 2026-05-22 · 🌀 gr-qc · astro-ph.CO

The imprints of the instantaneous appearance of a conformal Killing vector field on the evolution of self-gravitating fluid spheres

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 04:08 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌀 gr-qc astro-ph.CO
keywords conformal Killing vectorself-gravitating fluid spheresinstantaneous appearanceevolutionadiabatic fluidsdissipative fluidsphysical variablessmoking gun signature
0
0 comments X

The pith

The instantaneous appearance of a conformal Killing vector during the evolution of self-gravitating fluid spheres leaves a detectable signature in physical variables.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper investigates the effects of a conformal Killing vector field appearing suddenly at a specific time in the evolution of self-gravitating fluid spheres. The authors introduce a tensor variable with time dependence chosen to satisfy the CKV condition at that instant. They analyze both adiabatic and dissipative fluids and find that this appearance produces characteristic changes in relevant physical quantities. This provides a way to identify the emergence of the CKV through observable imprints in the system's behavior.

Core claim

By introducing a tensor variable whose time dependence allows for the existence of a conformal Killing vector at a given value of the time-like coordinate, the analysis of physical variables in adiabatic and dissipative self-gravitating fluid spheres reveals a smoking gun signature associated with the instantaneous emergence of the CKV.

What carries the argument

A tensor variable introduced to enforce the instantaneous CKV condition through its time dependence.

If this is right

  • The physical variables of the fluid spheres exhibit specific imprints when the CKV appears.
  • This signature holds for both adiabatic and dissipative cases.
  • The results suggest applications in understanding evolutionary processes in gravitational systems.
  • Further work is needed on open questions related to the construction and its implications.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • This approach could be extended to numerical relativity simulations to detect symmetry emergence dynamically.
  • It may connect to problems in identifying exact solutions or approximate symmetries in collapse scenarios.
  • Testing the consistency of the tensor variable construction in specific metric ansatze would be a natural next step.

Load-bearing premise

The tensor variable can be introduced with time dependence that enforces the CKV without violating the Einstein equations or creating unphysical artifacts in the fluid.

What would settle it

A calculation or simulation of a specific fluid sphere model showing whether the predicted signatures in density, pressure, or other variables appear precisely at the time when the CKV condition is imposed.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.23732 by A. Di Prisco, J. Ospino, L. Herrera.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: FIG. 1 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p007_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: FIG. 2 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p009_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Indeed at y = 0 they experience a strong dis￾continuity, which occurs for any value of the radial coor￾dinate. Thus as it follows from the above comments the in￾stantaneously appearance of a CKV produces important effects on the subsequent evolution of the system, some of which are directly related to observable variables (e.g luminosity and the gravitational redshift). However two questions are in order a… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We study the influence of the instantaneous appearance of a conformal Killing vector (CKV) in self-gravitating fluid spheres during their evolution. For doing that we introduce a tensor variable whose time dependence allows the existence of a CKV for a given value of the time-like coordinate. We consider adiabatic and dissipative fluids. The analysis of different relevant physical variables in this process provides a smoking gun signature from the emergence of CKV at some point of the evolution. Prospective applications of these results, as well as open questions and pending issues related to this problem, are discussed.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The paper claims that introducing a tensor variable with chosen time dependence allows an instantaneous conformal Killing vector (CKV) to appear at a specific time coordinate value in the evolution of self-gravitating fluid spheres. It considers both adiabatic and dissipative fluids and asserts that analysis of relevant physical variables yields a distinctive 'smoking gun' signature of this CKV emergence, with discussion of prospective applications and open questions.

Significance. If the auxiliary tensor construction is shown to preserve consistency with the Einstein equations, the work could supply a concrete diagnostic for detecting the onset of conformal symmetry in relativistic fluid dynamics, potentially applicable to models of stellar collapse or compact object evolution. The explicit treatment of both adiabatic and dissipative cases and the forward-looking discussion of applications are positive features.

major comments (1)
  1. [Construction of the tensor variable (section describing the model setup)] The central construction (the tensor variable whose time dependence is selected to enforce the instantaneous CKV) is introduced without an explicit demonstration that the resulting metric and stress-energy tensor continue to satisfy the Einstein-fluid equations and the contracted Bianchi identities. This verification is load-bearing for the claim that the observed signatures in physical variables are genuine consequences of the CKV rather than artifacts of the auxiliary choice.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract would benefit from naming the specific physical variables whose evolution is analyzed to produce the claimed signature.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their careful review and constructive feedback. We address the sole major comment below and will revise the manuscript to incorporate the requested verification.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Construction of the tensor variable (section describing the model setup)] The central construction (the tensor variable whose time dependence is selected to enforce the instantaneous CKV) is introduced without an explicit demonstration that the resulting metric and stress-energy tensor continue to satisfy the Einstein-fluid equations and the contracted Bianchi identities. This verification is load-bearing for the claim that the observed signatures in physical variables are genuine consequences of the CKV rather than artifacts of the auxiliary choice.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit verification of consistency with the Einstein equations and contracted Bianchi identities is essential and was not provided in the original manuscript. In the revised version we will add a dedicated subsection (or appendix) that substitutes the chosen time-dependent tensor into the field equations, confirms that the resulting stress-energy tensor satisfies the Einstein-fluid system at all times (including at the instant the CKV appears), and verifies that the Bianchi identities remain satisfied. This addition will demonstrate that the reported signatures are not artifacts of an inconsistent auxiliary choice. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; construction is a modeling choice whose consequences are analyzed separately

full rationale

The paper introduces an auxiliary tensor whose time dependence is chosen to enforce an instantaneous CKV condition at one coordinate value, then examines the resulting evolution of physical variables (density, pressure, heat flux, etc.) for signatures. No equation in the provided abstract reduces the claimed signatures to the definition of that tensor by construction, nor is any load-bearing step justified solely by self-citation. The derivation therefore remains self-contained: the tensor is an input ansatz whose downstream effects on the fluid are computed and reported as output. Absent explicit equations showing that a reported signature is identical to the imposed CKV condition itself, the analysis does not meet the threshold for circularity.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

Abstract-only; no explicit free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are stated. The central construction (a tensor variable whose time dependence enforces CKV) is introduced without listed assumptions or independent evidence.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5630 in / 1086 out tokens · 26688 ms · 2026-05-25T04:08:03.880167+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

What do these tags mean?
matches
The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

96 extracted references · 96 canonical work pages · 2 internal anchors

  1. [1]

    The acceleration aα and the expansion Θ of the fluid are given by aα =Vα ;βV β, Θ = V α ;α, (6) and its shear σαβ by σαβ =V(α ;β ) +a(αVβ ) − 1 3 Θhαβ

    and ( 4), are explicitly written in Appendix A. The acceleration aα and the expansion Θ of the fluid are given by aα =Vα ;βV β, Θ = V α ;α, (6) and its shear σαβ by σαβ =V(α ;β ) +a(αVβ ) − 1 3 Θhαβ . (7) From ( 6) we have for the four–acceleration and its scalar a, aα =aKα, a = A′ AB, (8) and for the expansion Θ = 1 A ( ˙B B + 2 ˙R R ) , (9) where the pri...

  2. [2]

    (28) Thus the matching of ( 1) and ( 22) on Σ implies ( 26) and (28)

    with ( A3) and ( A4) one obtains q Σ =Pr. (28) Thus the matching of ( 1) and ( 22) on Σ implies ( 26) and (28). Also, we have q Σ = L 4πρ 2, (29) where LΣ denotes the total luminosity of the sphere as measured on its surface and is given by L Σ =L∞ ( 1 − 2m ρ + 2dρ dv )− 1 , (30) 4 and where L∞ = − dM dv Σ = − [ dm dt dt dτ (dv dτ )− 1] , (31) is the tota...

  3. [3]

    (37) Sometimes it is possible to simplify the equation above, in the so called truncated transport equation, when the last term in (

    by contracting with the unit spacelike vector K α , we get ˜τV αq,α +q = −κ (K αT,α +Ta ) − 1 2κT 2 ( ˜τV α κT 2 ) ;α q. (37) Sometimes it is possible to simplify the equation above, in the so called truncated transport equation, when the last term in (

  4. [4]

    may be neglected [80], producing ˜τV αq,α +q = −κ (K αT,α +Ta ). (38) D. The homologous and quasi–homologous conditions For time dependent systems a full description of the complexity of the fluid requires not only a variable mea- suring the complexity of the structure of the fluid ( YT F ), but also we need to describe the complexity of the pat- tern of ev...

  5. [5]

    homologous evolution

    or ( 41) that U = ˜a(t)R ⇒ ˙R =A˜aR, (42) wherea may be put equal to 1 without loos of generality by reparametrizying t. Thus we may write the above condition as ˙R =αAR, (43) where α is a unit constant with dimensions of 1 length . This relationship is characteristic of the homologous evolution in Newtonian hydrodynamics [81–83]. In our case, this may oc...

  6. [6]

    In [71] the homologous condition was relaxed, leading to what was defined as quasi–homologous evolution, re- stricted only by condition ( 42), implying 4π R′Bq + σ R = 0

    implies ( 44), only if the fluid is geodesic. In [71] the homologous condition was relaxed, leading to what was defined as quasi–homologous evolution, re- stricted only by condition ( 42), implying 4π R′Bq + σ R = 0. (46) III. THE ASYMMETR Y F ACTOR FOR CONFORMAL MOTIONS Spacetimes whose line element is defined by ( 1), ad- mitting a CKV, satisfy the equatio...

  7. [7]

    (54) In order to proceed further we need to specify the form of the tensor Hαβ

    one obtains for ( 1) H02 = H03 = H13 = H12 =H23 = 0, and the following equations ψ = H00 2A2 + χ 1A′ A , (51) ψ = − H22 2R2 +χ 1R′ R (52) ψ = − H11 2B2 +χ 1B′ B +χ 1′, (53) B2 ˙χ 1 =H01. (54) In order to proceed further we need to specify the form of the tensor Hαβ . In this work we have initially consid- ered two possible forms of this tensor, namely: • ...

  8. [8]

    Using the results above we shall build up our two mod- els corresponding to the adiabatic and the dissipative case respectively

    it follows that ˙χ 1 = 0, and from ( 51), (52) and ( 53) we obtain αR =Bφ (t), (58) and A =αRe − αHr 2 , (59) where φ is arbitrary dimensionless function, and we choose χ 1 = 1. Using the results above we shall build up our two mod- els corresponding to the adiabatic and the dissipative case respectively. IV. NON DISSIP ATIVE CASE q = 0. If we assume that...

  9. [9]

    that the fluid is shear-free, which implies, using ( 58), that φ =b =constant. Feeding back the above into ( A3) (with q = 0) we obtain after integration R = b α [ α ∫ Ω(t,r )dr +f (r) ], (60) A = be− αHr 2 [ α ∫ Ω(t,r )dr +f (r) ], (61) B = 1[ α ∫ Ω(t,r )dr +f (r) ], (62) where Ω(t,r ) ≡ b 2α ∫ ˙RH R2 dt, (63) 6 and f (r) is an arbitrary dimensionless fun...

  10. [10]

    (68) From the above we obtain for ∫ Ωdr ∫ Ωdr = 2b α 2re− α 2r(t− t0 ) 2 +s(r), (69) where s(r) ≡ ∫ c(r)dr

    into ( 66) we obtain Ω = − be− α 2r(t− t0 ) 2 αr [ α (t − t0) + 2 αr ] +c(r). (68) From the above we obtain for ∫ Ωdr ∫ Ωdr = 2b α 2re− α 2r(t− t0 ) 2 +s(r), (69) where s(r) ≡ ∫ c(r)dr. Thus we may write the metric variables as R = b αZ (r,t ), (70) B = 1 Z(r,t ), (71) A = αrX (r,t ) 2Z(r,t ) , (72) where X(r,t ) ≡ 2b αre− α 2r(t− t0 ) 2 , Z(t,r ) ≡ X(t,r...

  11. [11]

    In such a case relationships ( 58) and ( 59) still hold

    of the tensor Hαβ . In such a case relationships ( 58) and ( 59) still hold. FIG. 1. YT F /α 2 and 8π (Pr − P⊥ )/α 2 as functions of y and x in the interval (y, − 10, 100), ( x, . 3, 1) and ( y, − 9, 1) respectively; αR Σ in the interval ( y, − 20, 20), for the non-dissipative case . Thus we have αR =Bφ (t), A =αRe − Hαr 2 , (88) where φ(t) is a dimension...

  12. [12]

    hysteresis

    comes from the equation − y cosh(y/ 2) 2 sinh(y/ 2) + ey/ 2 y ( 1 − y cosh(y/ 2) 2 sinh(y/ 2) ) = 0. (106) Using the truncated version of the transport equation (38), and ( 101) we may obtain an expression for the tem- perature. Unfortunately though such an expression con- tains hypergeometric functions making it impossible to obtain any useful informatio...

  13. [13]

    hysteresis type phenomenon

    is only satisfied for y ≈ − 0. 9). As depicted in the graphic for the areal radius of the boundary surface, in Figure 2, this model represents an initially expanding sphere reaching a maximum value of RΣ at y = 0 (when the the CKV appears) becoming a contracting sphere afterward. The graphic of the lumi- nosity at the boundary surface indicates that it van...

  14. [14]

    Invariante Variationsprobleme

    Noether, E. Invariante Variationsprobleme. Nachrichten von der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen. Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse , 1918, 235-257

  15. [15]

    Self-Similar Solution s as Intermediate Asymptotics

    Barenblatt, G.I.; Zeldovich, Ya.B. Self-Similar Solution s as Intermediate Asymptotics. Ann. Rev. Fluid. Mech. 1972, 4, 285–312. 12

  16. [16]

    Sedov, L. I. Propagation of strong shock waves. J. Appl. Math. Mech. 1946, 10, 241–250

  17. [17]

    Sedov, L. I. Similarity and Dimensional Methods in Me- chanics; Academic. New York, USA, 1967

  18. [18]

    The Formation of a Blast Wave by a Very In- tense Explosion

    Taylor, G.I. The Formation of a Blast Wave by a Very In- tense Explosion. II. The Atomic Explosion of 1945. Proc. Roy. Soc. 1950, 201, 175–186

  19. [19]

    Physics of Shock Waves and High Temperature; Academic

    Zeldovich, Ya.B.; Raizer, Yu.P. Physics of Shock Waves and High Temperature; Academic. New York, USA, 1963

  20. [20]

    Spherically symmetric similar- ity solutions of the Einstein field equations for a perfect fluid

    Cahill, M.E.; Taub, A.H. Spherically symmetric similar- ity solutions of the Einstein field equations for a perfect fluid. Commun. Math. Phys. 1971, 21, 1–40

  21. [21]

    Anisotropic fluids and conformal motions in general relativity

    Herrera, L.; Jimenez, J.; Leal, L.; Ponce de Leon, J.; Esculpi, M.; Galina, V. Anisotropic fluids and conformal motions in general relativity. J. Math. Phys. 1984, 25, 3274–3278

  22. [22]

    Isotropic spheres admitting a one parameter group of conformal motions

    Herrera,L.; Ponce de Leon, J. Isotropic spheres admitting a one parameter group of conformal motions. J. Math. Phys. 1985, 26, 778–784

  23. [23]

    Anisotropic spheres ad- mitting a one parameter group of conformal motions

    Herrera,L.; Ponce de Leon, J. Anisotropic spheres ad- mitting a one parameter group of conformal motions. J. Math. Phys. 1985, 26, 2018–2023

  24. [24]

    Isotropic and anisotropic charged spheres admitting a one parameter group of con- formal motions

    Herrera,L.; Ponce de Leon, J. Isotropic and anisotropic charged spheres admitting a one parameter group of con- formal motions. J. Math. Phys. 1985, 26, 2302–2307

  25. [25]

    Confined gravitational fields produced by anisotropic spheres

    Herrera,L.; Ponce de Leon, J. Confined gravitational fields produced by anisotropic spheres. J. Math. Phys. 1985, 26, 2847–2849

  26. [26]

    Kinematic and dynamic properties of conformal Killing vectors in anisotropic fluids

    Maartens, R.; Mason, P.S.; Tsamparlis, M. Kinematic and dynamic properties of conformal Killing vectors in anisotropic fluids. J. Math. Phys. 1986, 27, 2987–2994

  27. [27]

    Conformal collineations and anisotropic fluids in general relativity

    Duggal, K.L.; Sharma, R. Conformal collineations and anisotropic fluids in general relativity. J. Math. Phys. 1986, 27, 2511–2513

  28. [28]

    Conformally symmetric radiat- ing spheres in general relativity

    Esculpi, M.; Herrera, L. Conformally symmetric radiat- ing spheres in general relativity. J. Math. Phys. 1986, 27, 2087–2096

  29. [29]

    Relativistic fluids with shear and timelike conformal collineations

    Duggal, K.L. Relativistic fluids with shear and timelike conformal collineations. J. Math. Phys. 1987, 28, 2700– 2704

  30. [30]

    Kinematics and dynamics of conformal collineations in relativity

    Mason, D.P.; Maartens, R. Kinematics and dynamics of conformal collineations in relativity. J. Math. Phys. 1987, 28, 2182–2186

  31. [31]

    The Bondi metric and conformal motions

    Di Prisco, A.; Herrera, L.; Jimenez, J.; Galina , V.; Ibanez, J. The Bondi metric and conformal motions. J. Math. Phys. 1987, 28, 2692–2696

  32. [32]

    Relativistic fluids and metric symmetries

    Duggal, K.L. Relativistic fluids and metric symmetries. J. Math. Phys. 1989, 30, 1316–1322

  33. [33]

    Coley.; B.O.J

    A.A. Coley.; B.O.J. Tupper. Special conformal Killing vector space-times and symmetry inheritance J. Math. Phys., 1989 30, 261–2625

  34. [34]

    Coley.; B.O.J

    A.A. Coley.; B.O.J. Tupper. Spacetimes admitting inher- iting conformal Killing vector fields Classical Quantum Grav. 1990, 7, 1961–1981

  35. [35]

    Coley.; B.O.J

    A.A. Coley.; B.O.J. Tupper. Spherically symmetric spacetimes admitting inheriting conformal Killing vector fields. Classical Quantum Grav. 1990, 7, 2195–2214

  36. [36]

    Conformally symmetric static fluid spheres

    Maartens, R; Maharaj, M.S. Conformally symmetric static fluid spheres. J. Math. Phys. 1990, 31, 151–155

  37. [37]

    Self-similar scalar soliton star in the thin wall approximation

    Di Prisco, A.; Herrera, L.; Esculpi, M. Self-similar scalar soliton star in the thin wall approximation. Phys. Rev. D 1991, 44, 2286–2294

  38. [38]

    Symmetry inheritance of conformal Killing vectors

    Saridakis, E.; Tsamparlis, M. Symmetry inheritance of conformal Killing vectors. J. Math. Phys. 1991, 32, 1541–1551

  39. [39]

    Time evolution of self–similar scalar soliton stars: A general study

    Aguirregabiria, J.M.; Di Prisco, A.; Herrera, L.; Ibanez, J. Time evolution of self–similar scalar soliton stars: A general study. Phys. Rev. D 1992, 46, 2723–2725

  40. [40]

    General so- lution and classification of conformal motions in static spherical spacetimes

    Maartens, R.;Maharaj, S.D.; Tupper, B.O.J. General so- lution and classification of conformal motions in static spherical spacetimes. Classical Quantum Grav. 1995, 12, 2577–2586

  41. [41]

    Conformal symmetries in static spherically symmetric spacetimes

    Maharaj, S.D.; Maartens, R.; Maharaj, M.S. Conformal symmetries in static spherically symmetric spacetimes. Int. J. Theor. Phys. 1995, 34, 2285–222901

  42. [42]

    Homothetic perfect fluid spacetimes

    Carot , J.; Sintes, A. Homothetic perfect fluid spacetimes. Classical Quantum Grav. 1997, 14, 1183–1205

  43. [43]

    Carr, B.J.; Coley, A. A. TOPICAL REVIEW: Self- similarity in general relativity. Classical Quantum Grav. 1999, 16, R31–R71

  44. [44]

    Self-similar and charged spheres in the diffusion approximation

    Barreto, W.; da Silva, A. Self-similar and charged spheres in the diffusion approximation. Classical Quantum Grav. 1999, 16, 1783–1792

  45. [45]

    Yilmaz, I; Baysal, H

    Yavuz, I. ; Yilmaz, I; Baysal, H. Strange Quark Matter Attached to the String Cloud in the Spherical Symmetric Space-Time Admitting Conformal Motion. Int. J. Mod. Phys. D 2005, 14, 1365–1372

  46. [46]

    Timelike and Spacelike Mat- ter Inheritance Vectors in Specific Forms of Energy- Momentum Tensor

    Sharif, M.; Sheikh, U. Timelike and Spacelike Mat- ter Inheritance Vectors in Specific Forms of Energy- Momentum Tensor. Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 2006, 21, 3213– 3234

  47. [47]

    Self– similar and charged radiating spheres: an anisotropic ap- proach

    Barreto, W.; Rodriguez, B.; Rosales, L.; Serrano, O. Self– similar and charged radiating spheres: an anisotropic ap- proach. Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 2007, 39, 23–39

  48. [48]

    Quark stars admitting a one pa- rameter group of conformal motions

    Mak, M.K.; Harko, T. Quark stars admitting a one pa- rameter group of conformal motions. Int. J. Mod. Phys. D. 2004, 13, 149–156

  49. [49]

    Conformal symmetries of spherical spacetimes

    Moopanar, S.; Maharaj, S.D. Conformal symmetries of spherical spacetimes. Int. J. Theor. Phys. 2010, 49, 1878–1885

  50. [50]

    Vaydya–Tikekar–type superdense star admitting conformal motion in presence of quintessence field

    Bhar, P. Vaydya–Tikekar–type superdense star admitting conformal motion in presence of quintessence field. Eur. Phys. J. C 2015, 75, 123

  51. [51]

    Spatially inhomogeneous and irro- tational geometries admitting intrinsic conformal sym- metries

    Apostolopoulos, P.S. Spatially inhomogeneous and irro- tational geometries admitting intrinsic conformal sym- metries. Phys. Rev. D 2016, 94, 124052

  52. [52]

    Anisotropic stars with non–static conformal symmetry

    Shee, D.; Rahaman, F.; Guha, B.K.; Ray, S. Anisotropic stars with non–static conformal symmetry. Astr. Space Sci. 2016, 361, 167

  53. [53]

    Conformal vectors and stellar models

    Majonjo, A.; Maharaj, S.D.; Moopanar, S. Conformal vectors and stellar models. Eur. Phys. J. Plus 2017, 132, 62

  54. [54]

    A 4D spacetime embedded in a 5D pseudo–Euclidean space describing in- terior compact stars

    Newton Singh, K.; Murad, M.; Pant, N. A 4D spacetime embedded in a 5D pseudo–Euclidean space describing in- terior compact stars. Eur. Phys. J. A 2017, 53, 21

  55. [55]

    On the features of Matese-Whitman mass function

    Shee, D.; Deb, D.; Ghosh, S.; Guha, B.K.; Ray, S. On the features of Matese–Whitman mass function. arXiv: 1706.00674 2017

  56. [56]

    Self–similarity in static axiall y symmetric relativistic fluid

    Herrera, L.; Di Prisco, A. Self–similarity in static axiall y symmetric relativistic fluid. Int. J. Mod. Phys. D 2018, 27, 1750176

  57. [57]

    New class of solu- tions in conformally symmetric massless scalar field col- lapse

    Ojako, S.; Goswami, R.; Maharaj, S.D. New class of solu- tions in conformally symmetric massless scalar field col- lapse. Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 2021, 53, 13

  58. [58]

    Spherically symmetric distribu- tions of wet dark fluid admitting conformal motions

    Shobhane, P.; Deo, S. Spherically symmetric distribu- tions of wet dark fluid admitting conformal motions. Adv. Appl. Math. Sci. 2021, 20, 1591–1598

  59. [59]

    Gen- 13 eralized compact star models with conformal symmetry

    Jape, J.; Maharaj, S.D.; Sunzu, J.; Mkenyeleye, J. Gen- 13 eralized compact star models with conformal symmetry. Eur. Phys. J. C 2021, 81, 2150121

  60. [60]

    Generating solutions for charged stellar mod- els in general relativity

    Ivanov, B. Generating solutions for charged stellar mod- els in general relativity. Eur. Phys. J. C 2021, 81, 227

  61. [61]

    On homothetic Killing vectors in stationary axisymmet- ric vacuum spacetimes

    Sherif, A.; Dunsby, P.; Goswami , R.; Maharaj, S.D. On homothetic Killing vectors in stationary axisymmet- ric vacuum spacetimes. Int. J. Geom. Meth. Mod. Phys. 2021, 18, 21550121

  62. [62]

    A Tolman-like Compact Model with Conformal Geometry

    Matondo, D.; Maharaj, S.D. A Tolman-like Compact Model with Conformal Geometry. Entropy 2021, 23, 1406

  63. [63]

    Stable and self–consistent charged gravastar model within the framework of f (R, T ) gravity

    Bhar, P.; Rej, P. Stable and self–consistent charged gravastar model within the framework of f (R, T ) gravity. Eur. Phys. J. C 2021, 81, 763

  64. [64]

    Proper special conformal Killing vectors and the quadratic theory of gravity

    Sharma, R. Proper special conformal Killing vectors and the quadratic theory of gravity. J. Math. Phys. , 1991, 32, 1854

  65. [65]

    Can the galactic rotation curves be explained in brane world models? Phy

    Mak, M.K.; Harko, T. Can the galactic rotation curves be explained in brane world models? Phy. Rev. D 2004, 70, 024010

  66. [66]

    Conformally symmetric vacuum solutions of the gravitational field equations in the brane world model

    Harko, T.; Mak, M.K. Conformally symmetric vacuum solutions of the gravitational field equations in the brane world model. Ann. Phys. , 2005, 319, 471–492

  67. [67]

    Static spherically symmetric solutions in f (G) gravity

    Sharif, M.; Ismat Fatima, H. Static spherically symmetric solutions in f (G) gravity. Int. J. Mod. Phys. D 2016, 25, 1650083

  68. [68]

    Brane f (R) gravity and dark matter

    Sefiedgar, A.S.; Haghani, Z.; Sepangi, H.R. Brane f (R) gravity and dark matter. Phy. Rev. D 2012, 85, 064012

  69. [69]

    Higher dimensional charged gravastar admitting conformal motion

    Bhar, P. Higher dimensional charged gravastar admitting conformal motion. Astrophys. Space Sci. 2014, 354, 457– 462

  70. [70]

    Conformal cylindrically sym- metric spacetimes in modified gravity

    Turkoglu, M.; Dogru, M. Conformal cylindrically sym- metric spacetimes in modified gravity. Mod. Phys. Lett. A 2015, 30, 1550202

  71. [71]

    Relativis- tic compact stars in f (T ) gravity admitting conformal motion

    Das, A.; Rahaman, F.; Guha, B.K.; Ray, S. Relativis- tic compact stars in f (T ) gravity admitting conformal motion. Astrophys. Space Sci. 2015, 358, 36

  72. [72]

    Radiation Fluid Stars in the Non-minimally Coupled $Y(R)F^2$ Gravity

    Sert, O. Radiation fluid stars in the non–minimally cou- pled Y (R)F 2 gravity. arXiv: 1611.03821v1 2016

  73. [73]

    In- terior solutions for fluid spheres in f (R, T ) gravity ad- mitting conformal killing vectors

    Zubair, M.; Sardar, L.H.; Rahaman, F.; Abbas, G. In- terior solutions for fluid spheres in f (R, T ) gravity ad- mitting conformal killing vectors. Astrophys. Space Sci. 2016, 361, 238

  74. [74]

    Compact stars in f (R, T ) gravity

    Das, A.; Rahaman, F.; Guha, B.K.; Ray, S. Compact stars in f (R, T ) gravity. Eur. Phys. J. C 2016, 76, 654

  75. [75]

    Stable charged gravastar model in f (R, T 2) gravity with conformal motion

    Sharif, M.; Naz, S. Stable charged gravastar model in f (R, T 2) gravity with conformal motion. Eur. Phys. J. P. 2022, 137, 421

  76. [76]

    Conformally traversable wormholes

    Bohmer, C.G.; Harko , T.; Lobo, F.S.N. Conformally traversable wormholes. Phys. Rev. D 2007, 76, 084014

  77. [77]

    Wormhole geometries with conformal motions

    Bohmer, C.G.; Harko , T.; Lobo, F.S.N. Wormhole geometries with conformal motions. Classical Quantum Grav. 2008, 25, 075016

  78. [78]

    Rahaman, F.; Ray, S.; Khadekar, G.; Kuhfittig, P.; Karakar, I. Int. J. Theor. Phys. 2015, 54, 699

  79. [79]

    Wormholes admitting conformal Killing vec- tors and supported by generalized Chaplygin gas

    Kuhfittig, P. Wormholes admitting conformal Killing vec- tors and supported by generalized Chaplygin gas. Eur. Phys. J. C 2015, 75, 357

  80. [80]

    Conformally symmet- ric traversable wormhole in f (G) gravity

    Sharif, M.; Ismat Fatima, H. Conformally symmet- ric traversable wormhole in f (G) gravity. Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 2016, 48, 148

Showing first 80 references.