Quiver quantum mechanics describes the low energy dynamics of a system of
wrapped D-branes. It captures several aspects of single and multicentered BPS
black hole geometries in four-dimensional N=2 supergravity such
as the presence of bound states and an exponential growth of microstates. The
Coulomb branch of an Abelian three node quiver is obtained by integrating out
the massive strings connecting the D-particles. It allows for a scaling regime
corresponding to a deep AdS2 throat on the gravity side. In this scaling
regime, the Coulomb branch is shown to be an SL(2,R) invariant
multi-particle superconformal quantum mechanics. Finally, we integrate out the
strings at finite temperature---rather than in their ground state---and show
how the Coulomb branch `melts' into the Higgs branch at high enough
temperatures. For scaling solutions the melting occurs for arbitrarily small
temperatures, whereas bound states can be metastable and thus long lived.
Throughout the paper, we discuss how far the analogy between the quiver model
and the gravity picture, particularly within the AdS2 throat, can be taken.Comment: 49 pages, 16 figure