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Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition

Unitarity implies that the evaporation of microscopic quasi-classical black holes cannot be universal in different particle species. This creates a puzzle, since it conflicts with the thermal nature of quasi-classical black holes, according to which all the species should see the same horizon and be...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dvali, Gia, Pujolas, Oriol
Formato: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Phys. Rev. D 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.79.064032
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1152380
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author Dvali, Gia
Pujolas, Oriol
author_facet Dvali, Gia
Pujolas, Oriol
author_sort Dvali, Gia
collection CERN
description Unitarity implies that the evaporation of microscopic quasi-classical black holes cannot be universal in different particle species. This creates a puzzle, since it conflicts with the thermal nature of quasi-classical black holes, according to which all the species should see the same horizon and be produced with the same Hawking temperatures. We resolve this puzzle by showing that for the microscopic black holes, on top the usual quantum evaporation time, there is a new time-scale which characterizes a purely classical process during which the black hole looses the ability to differentiate among the species, and becomes democratic. We demonstrate this phenomenon in a well-understood framework of large extra dimensions, with a number of parallel branes. An initially non-democratic black hole is the one localized on one of the branes, with its high-dimensional Schwarzschild radius being much shorter than the interbrane distance. Such a black hole seemingly cannot evaporate into the species localized on the other branes, that are beyond its reach. We demonstrate that in reality the system evolves classically in time, in such a way that the black hole accretes the neighboring branes. The end result is a completely democratic static configuration, in which all the branes share the same black hole, and all the species are produced with the same Hawking temperature. Thus, just like their macroscopic counterparts, the microscopic blac k holes are universal bridges to the hidden sector physics.
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spelling cern-11523802023-01-26T07:20:05Z doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.79.064032 http://cds.cern.ch/record/1152380 eng Dvali, Gia Pujolas, Oriol Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition Particle Physics - Theory Unitarity implies that the evaporation of microscopic quasi-classical black holes cannot be universal in different particle species. This creates a puzzle, since it conflicts with the thermal nature of quasi-classical black holes, according to which all the species should see the same horizon and be produced with the same Hawking temperatures. We resolve this puzzle by showing that for the microscopic black holes, on top the usual quantum evaporation time, there is a new time-scale which characterizes a purely classical process during which the black hole looses the ability to differentiate among the species, and becomes democratic. We demonstrate this phenomenon in a well-understood framework of large extra dimensions, with a number of parallel branes. An initially non-democratic black hole is the one localized on one of the branes, with its high-dimensional Schwarzschild radius being much shorter than the interbrane distance. Such a black hole seemingly cannot evaporate into the species localized on the other branes, that are beyond its reach. We demonstrate that in reality the system evolves classically in time, in such a way that the black hole accretes the neighboring branes. The end result is a completely democratic static configuration, in which all the branes share the same black hole, and all the species are produced with the same Hawking temperature. Thus, just like their macroscopic counterparts, the microscopic blac k holes are universal bridges to the hidden sector physics. Unitarity implies that the evaporation of microscopic quasi-classical black holes cannot be universal in different particle species. This creates a puzzle, since it conflicts with the thermal nature of quasi-classical black holes, according to which all the species should see the same horizon and be produced with the same Hawking temperatures. We resolve this puzzle by showing that for the microscopic black holes, on top the usual quantum evaporation time, there is a new time-scale which characterizes a purely classical process during which the black hole looses the ability to differentiate among the species, and becomes democratic. We demonstrate this phenomenon in a well-understood framework of large extra dimensions, with a number of parallel branes. An initially non-democratic black hole is the one localized on one of the branes, with its high-dimensional Schwarzschild radius being much shorter than the interbrane distance. Such a black hole seemingly cannot evaporate into the species localized on the other branes, that are beyond its reach. We demonstrate that in reality the system evolves classically in time, in such a way that the black hole accretes the neighboring branes. The end result is a completely democratic static configuration, in which all the branes share the same black hole, and all the species are produced with the same Hawking temperature. Thus, just like their macroscopic counterparts, the microscopic black holes are universal bridges to the hidden sector physics. info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/226371 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Education Level info:eu-repo/semantics/article http://cds.cern.ch/record/1152380 Phys. Rev. D Phys. Rev. D, (2009) pp. 064032 2008-12-19
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Theory
Dvali, Gia
Pujolas, Oriol
Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition
title Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition
title_full Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition
title_fullStr Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition
title_full_unstemmed Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition
title_short Micro Black Holes and the Democratic Transition
title_sort micro black holes and the democratic transition
topic Particle Physics - Theory
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.79.064032
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1152380
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1152380
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