113 research outputs found
Charged null fluid and the weak energy condition
Uses the Einstein-Maxwell field equations to derive the fundamental equation of motion for charged null fluid. This equation of motion includes a Lorentz force term. Using this equation, it is shown that charged null fluid always satisfies the weak energy condition. This result is in contrast to previous interpretations of the charged Vaidya solution (a special case of a charged null fluid), which produced violations of the weak energy condition. The errors in the previous interpretations are explained. The new interpretation is then applied explicitly to the charged Vaidya solution
Approximate solution to the CGHS field equations for two-dimensional evaporating black holes
Callan, Giddings, Harvey and Strominger (CGHS) previously introduced a
two-dimensional semiclassical model of gravity coupled to a dilaton and to
matter fields. Their model yields a system of field equations which may
describe the formation of a black hole in gravitational collapse as well as its
subsequent evaporation. Here we present an approximate analytical solution to
the semiclassical CGHS field equations. This solution is constructed using the
recently-introduced formalism of flux-conserving hyperbolic systems. We also
explore the asymptotic behavior at the horizon of the evaporating black hole
Late-time tails in extremal Reissner-Nordstrom spacetime
This note discusses the late-time decay of perturbations outside extremal
Reissner-Nordstrom black hole. We consider individual spherical-harmonic modes
of massless scalar field. The initial data are assumed to be of compact
support, with generic regular behavior across the horizon. The scalar
perturbations are found to decay at late time as . We also provide
the spatial dependence of the late-time tails, including the exact overall
pre-factor.Comment: 4 page
Firewall or smooth horizon?
Recently, Almheiri, Marolf, Polchinski, and Sully found that for a
sufficiently old black hole (BH), the set of assumptions known as the
\emph{complementarity postulates} appears to be inconsistent with the
assumption of local regularity at the horizon. They concluded that the horizon
of an old BH is likely to be the locus of local irregularity, a "firewall".
Here I point out that if one adopts a different assumption, namely that
semiclassical physics holds throughout its anticipated domain of validity, then
no inconsistency seems to arise, and the horizon retains its regularity. In
this alternative view-point, the vast portion of the original BH information
remains trapped inside the BH throughout the semiclassical domain of
evaporation, and possibly leaks out later on. This appears to be an inevitable
outcome of semiclassical gravity.Comment: A slightly different version (with small modifications, mostly
semantic, and some updated references) was published in Gen. Relativ. Gravi
Interior design of a two-dimensional semiclassic black hole
We look into the inner structure of a two-dimensional dilatonic evaporating
black hole. We establish and employ the homogenous approximation for the
black-hole interior. The field equations admit two types of singularities, and
their local asymptotic structure is investigated. One of these singularities is
found to develop, as a spacelike singularity, inside the black hole. We then
study the internal structure of the evaporating black hole from the horizon to
the singularity.Comment: Typos correcte
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