scholarly journals A falling magnetic monopole as a holographic local quench

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolò Zenoni ◽  
Roberto Auzzi ◽  
Stefania Caggioli ◽  
Maria Martinelli ◽  
Giuseppe Nardelli

Abstract An analytic static monopole solution is found in global AdS4, in the limit of small backreaction. This solution is mapped in Poincaré patch to a falling monopole configuration, which is dual to a local quench triggered by the injection of a condensate. Choosing boundary conditions which are dual to a time-independent Hamiltonian, we find the same functional form of the energy-momentum tensor as the one of a quench dual to a falling black hole. On the contrary, the details of the spread of entanglement entropy are very different from the falling black hole case, where the quench induces always a higher entropy compared to the vacuum, i.e. ∆S > 0. In the propagation of entanglement entropy for the monopole quench, there is instead a competition between a negative contribution to ∆S due to the scalar condensate and a positive one carried by the freely propagating quasiparticles generated by the energy injection.

The thermodynamic theory underlying black hole processes is developed in detail and applied to model systems. I t is found that Kerr-Newman black holes undergo a phase transition at a = 0.68 M or Q = 0.86 M , where the heat capacity has an infinite discontinuity. Above the transition values the specific heat is positive, permitting isothermal equilibrium with a surrounding heat bath. Simple processes and stability criteria for various black hole situations are investigated. The limits for entropieally favoured black hole formation are found. The Nernst conditions for the third law of thermodynamics are not satisfied fully for black holes. There is no obvious thermodynamic reason why a black hole may not be cooled down below absolute zero and converted into a naked singularity. Quantum energy-momentum tensor calculations for uncharged black holes are extended to the Reissner-Nordstrom case, and found to be fully consistent with the thermodynamic picture for Q < M . For Q > M the model predicts that ‘naked’ collapse also produces radiation, with such intensity that the collapsing matter is entirely evaporated away before a naked singularity can form.


1987 ◽  
Vol 02 (05) ◽  
pp. 1591-1615 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.A. BEREZIN

A method for the phenomenological description of particle production is proposed. Correspondingly modified equations of motion and energy-momentum tensor are obtained. In order to illustrate this method we reconsider from the new point of view of (i) the C-field Hoyle-Narlikar cosmology, (ii) the influence of the particle production process on metric inside the event horizon of a charged black hole and (iii) a nonsingular cosmological model.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (18) ◽  
pp. 3077-3090 ◽  
Author(s):  
BRADLY K. BUTTON ◽  
LEO RODRIGUEZ ◽  
CATHERINE A. WHITING ◽  
TUNA YILDIRIM

We show that the near horizon regime of a Kerr–Newman AdS (KNAdS) black hole, given by its two-dimensional analogue a là Robinson and Wilczek (Phys. Rev. Lett.95, 011303 (2005)), is asymptotically AdS2 and dual to a one-dimensional quantum conformal field theory (CFT). The s-wave contribution of the resulting CFT's energy–momentum tensor together with the asymptotic symmetries, generate a centrally extended Virasoro algebra, whose central charge reproduces the Bekenstein–Hawking entropy via Cardy's formula. Our derived central charge also agrees with the near extremal Kerr/CFT correspondence (Phys. Rev. D80, 124008 (2009)) in the appropriate limits. We also compute the Hawking temperature of the KNAdS black hole by coupling its Robinson and Wilczek two-dimensional analogue (RW2DA) to conformal matter.


The physical basis underlying the black hole evaporation process is clarified by a calculation of the expectation value of the energy-momentum tensor for a massless scalar field in a completely general two dimensional collapse scenario. It is found that radiation is produced inside the collapsing matter which propagates both inwards and outwards. The ingoing com­ponent eventually emerges from the star after travelling through the centre. The outgoing energy flux appears at infinity as the evaporation radiation discovered by Hawking. At late times, outside the star, the former component fades out exponentially, and the latter component approaches a value which is independent of the details of the collapse process. In the special case of a collapsing hollow, thin shell of matter, all the radiation is produced at the shell. These results are independent of regularization ambiguities, which enter only the static vacuum polariza­tion terms in the energy-momentum tensor. The significance of an earlier remark about black hole explosions is discussed in the light of these results.


2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (03) ◽  
pp. 1850032 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ernesto Contreras ◽  
Ángel Rincón ◽  
Benjamin Koch ◽  
Pedro Bargueño

In this work, we present a regular black hole solution, in the context of scale-dependent General Relativity, satisfying the weak energy condition. The source of this solution is an anisotropic effective energy–momentum tensor which appears when the scale dependence of the theory is turned-on. In this sense, the solution can be considered as a semiclassical extension of the Schwarzschild one.


2018 ◽  
Vol 96 (10) ◽  
pp. 1074-1084
Author(s):  
Bijan Saha

Within the scope of Bianchi type-IX cosmological model we have studied the role of spinor field in the evolution of the Universe. It is found that unlike the diagonal Bianchi models in this case the components of energy–momentum tensor of spinor field along the principal axis are not the same (i.e., [Formula: see text]), even in the absence of spinor field nonlinearity. The presence of nontrivial non-diagonal components of energy–momentum tensor of the spinor field imposes severe restrictions both on geometry of space–time and on the spinor field itself. As a result the space–time turns out to be either locally rotationally symmetric or isotropic. In this paper we considered the Bianchi type-IX space–time both for a trivial b, that corresponds to standard Bianchi type-IX and the one with a non-trivial b. It was found that a positive self-coupling constant λ1 gives rise to an oscillatory mode of expansion, while a trivial λ1 leads to rapid expansion at the early stage of evolution.


A method due to Chrzanowski, involving horizon multipole moments, is applied to the problem of a black hole perturbed by an enclosing, distant, spinning, spherical shell of matter. The hole, of mass M and angular momentum J = aM , is at the centre of the shell, their respective axes of rotation differing by an angle ξ. The matter-distribution on the shell is axisymmetric about its axis of rotation, but otherwise arbitrary, except that the total mass of the shell is small in comparison with M . The energy-momentum tensor of such a shell has been previously found by Bass & Pirani. Using their expression, we calculate the spin-down law for the black hole, correct to leading order in the inverse of the shell’s radius, and to second order in its angular velocity. The solution may be expressed in terms of the ‘electric’ and ‘magnetic’ components E αβ and B αβ of the Weyl tensor C ijkl , as calculated at the centre of the shell, in the absence of the black hole. For, denoting by J ∥ and J ⊥ the components of J parallel and perpendicular, respectively, to the direction of spin of the shell, we have always d J ∥ /d t = 0 and 1/ J ⊥ d J ⊥ /d t =–4/15 M 3 ( E αβ E αβ + B αβ B αβ ) (1–3/4ã 2 +15/4ã 2 sin 2 ξ), where ã = a / M . This law is of theoretical interest. It shows points both of similarity to, and of difference from, the known laws describing the response of a black hole to (uniform) scalar and electromagnetic fields.


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