Coupling electromagnetism to torsion

Black holes and spin-charge interactions

Authored by

Sebastian Bahamonde, Jorge Maggiolo, Christian Pfeifer

Abstract

The coupling between matter fields and gravity (encoded in the geometry of spacetime) can be realized in various ways. Most commonly, a minimal coupling principle is employed, meaning that all matter fields, except spinors, couple only to the spacetime metric, while spinors additionally couple to the spacetime connection. Nonminimal couplings between matter fields and spacetime curvature can arise, for example, from quantum field theory on curved spacetime through renormalization corrections, in gauge theories of gravity, and in effective field theories. In this article, we consider a nonminimal coupling Fμνμν between the field strength tensor of the electromagnetic field Fμν and the antisymmetric part of the Ricci tensor R̃[μν] in Riemann-Cartan geometry, which is based on a general metric-compatible connection with torsion. We find an exact four-dimensional vacuum solution that generalizes the Reissner-Nordström black hole from Einstein-Maxwell and reveals new interactions between the intrinsic torsion-spin charge and the electric charge. Qualitatively, this solution exhibits two distinct features: the effective charge is not constrained to be positive, and the sign of the electric charge influences its gravitational effects. We also derive slowly rotating solutions in three dimensions, representing a generalized slowly rotating BTZ black hole solution with couplings among the magnetic and electric charges, the angular momentum, and the intrinsic torsion-spin charge.

Details

External Organisation(s)
University of Tokyo
Institute for Basic Science
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso
Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria
University of Bremen
Type
Article
Journal
Physical Review D
Volume
113
No. of pages
16
ISSN
2470-0010
Publication date
09.02.2026
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1103/qcjx-9yz1 (Access: Closed )

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