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Hawking radiation via tachyon condensation and its implications to tachyon cosmology
Hawking radiation can be derived from the collapsing process of matter to
form a black hole. In this work, we show in more detail that the freely
infalling process of a probe (D-)particle (or point-like object) in a
non-extreme black hole background is essentially a tachyon condensation
process. That is, a probe D-particle will behave as an unstable D-particle in
the near-horizon region of a non-extreme black hole. From this point of view,
Hawking radiation can be viewed as the thermal radiation from rolling tachyon
on an unstable D-particle (i.e., the infalling probe) at the Hagedorn
temperature. The result has interesting implications to tachyon cosmology: the
uniform tachyon rolling in cosmology can automatically create particle pairs at
late times, via a mechanism just like the Hawking radiation process near a
black hole. So this particle creation process can naturally give rise to a hot
universe with thermal perturbations beyond tachyon inflation, providing an
alternative reheating mechanism.Comment: 22 page
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