Trans-Planckian particles are elementary particles accelerated such that
their energies surpass the Planck value. There are several reasons to believe
that trans-Planckian particles do not represent independent degrees of freedom
in Hilbert space, but they are controlled by the cis-Planckian particles. A way
to learn more about the mechanisms at work here, is to study black hole
horizons, starting from the scattering matrix Ansatz.
By compactifying one of the three physical spacial dimensions, the scattering
matrix Ansatz can be exploited more efficiently than before. The algebra of
operators on a black hole horizon allows for a few distinct representations. It
is found that this horizon can be seen as being built up from string bits with
unit lengths, each of which being described by a representation of the SO(2,1)
Lorentz group. We then demonstrate how the holographic principle works for this
case, by constructing the operators corresponding to a field in space-time. The
parameter t turns out to be quantized in Planckian units, divided by the period
R of the compactified dimension.Comment: 12 pages plain tex, 1 figur