We present a comprehensive study of TeV black hole events in Earth's
atmosphere originated by cosmic rays of very high energy. An advanced fortran
Monte Carlo code is developed and used to simulate black hole extensive air
showers from ultrahigh-energy neutrino-nucleon interactions. We investigate the
characteristics of these events, compare the black hole air showers to standard
model air showers, and test different theoretical and phenomenological models
of black hole formation and evolution. The main features of black hole air
showers are found to be independent of the model considered. No significant
differences between models are likely to be observed at fluorescence telescopes
and/or ground arrays. We also discuss the tau ``double bang'' signature in
black hole air showers. We find that the energy deposited in the second bang is
too small to produce a detectable peak. Our results show that the theory of
TeV-scale black holes in ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays leads to robust
predictions, but the fine prints of new physics are hardly to be investigated
through atmospheric black hole events in the near future.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure