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Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory
In previous papers we have shown how strings in a two-dimensional target space reconcile quantum mechanics with general relativity, thanks to an infinite set of conserved quantum numbers, ``W-hair'', associated with topological soliton-like states. In this paper we extend these arguments t...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
1991
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0370-2693(92)90189-B http://cds.cern.ch/record/228295 |
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author | Ellis, John R. Mavromatos, N.E. Nanopoulos, Dimitri V. |
author_facet | Ellis, John R. Mavromatos, N.E. Nanopoulos, Dimitri V. |
author_sort | Ellis, John R. |
collection | CERN |
description | In previous papers we have shown how strings in a two-dimensional target space reconcile quantum mechanics with general relativity, thanks to an infinite set of conserved quantum numbers, ``W-hair'', associated with topological soliton-like states. In this paper we extend these arguments to four dimensions, by considering explicitly the case of string black holes with radial symmetry. The key infinite-dimensional W-symmetry is associated with the $\frac{SU(1,1)}{U(1)}$ coset structure of the dilaton-graviton sector that is a model-independent feature of spherically symmetric four-dimensional strings. Arguments are also given that the enormous number of string {\it discrete (topological)} states account for the maintenance of quantum coherence during the (non-thermal) stringy evaporation process, as well as quenching the large Hawking-Bekenstein entropy associated with the black hole. Defining the latter as the measure of the loss of information for an observer at infinity, who - ignoring the higher string quantum numbers - keeps track only of the classical mass,angular momentum and charge of the black hole, one recovers the familiar a quadratic dependence on the black-hole mass by simple counting arguments on the asymptotic density of string states in a linear-dilaton background. |
id | cern-228295 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 1991 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-2282952020-07-23T21:24:43Zdoi:10.1016/0370-2693(92)90189-Bhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/228295engEllis, John R.Mavromatos, N.E.Nanopoulos, Dimitri V.Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String TheoryParticle Physics - TheoryIn previous papers we have shown how strings in a two-dimensional target space reconcile quantum mechanics with general relativity, thanks to an infinite set of conserved quantum numbers, ``W-hair'', associated with topological soliton-like states. In this paper we extend these arguments to four dimensions, by considering explicitly the case of string black holes with radial symmetry. The key infinite-dimensional W-symmetry is associated with the $\frac{SU(1,1)}{U(1)}$ coset structure of the dilaton-graviton sector that is a model-independent feature of spherically symmetric four-dimensional strings. Arguments are also given that the enormous number of string {\it discrete (topological)} states account for the maintenance of quantum coherence during the (non-thermal) stringy evaporation process, as well as quenching the large Hawking-Bekenstein entropy associated with the black hole. Defining the latter as the measure of the loss of information for an observer at infinity, who - ignoring the higher string quantum numbers - keeps track only of the classical mass,angular momentum and charge of the black hole, one recovers the familiar a quadratic dependence on the black-hole mass by simple counting arguments on the asymptotic density of string states in a linear-dilaton background.In previous papers we have shown how strings in a two-dimensional target space reconcile quantum mechanics with general relativity, thanks to an infinite set of conserved quantum numbers, ``W-hair'', associated with topological soliton-like states. In this paper we extend these arguments to four dimensions, by considering explicitly the case of string black holes with radial symmetry. The key infinite-dimensional W-symmetry is associated with the $\frac{SU(1,1)}{U(1)}$ coset structure of the dilaton-graviton sector that is a model-independent feature of spherically symmetric four-dimensional strings. Arguments are also given that the enormous number of string {\it discrete (topological)} states account for the maintenance of quantum coherence during the (non-thermal) stringy evaporation process, as well as quenching the large Hawking-Bekenstein entropy associated with the black hole. Defining the latter as the measure of the loss of information for an observer at infinity, who - ignoring the higher string quantum numbers - keeps track only of the classical mass,angular momentum and charge of the black hole, one recovers the familiar a quadratic dependence on the black-hole mass by simple counting arguments on the asymptotic density of string states in a linear-dilaton background.In previous papers we have shown how strings in a two-dimensional target space reconcile quantum mechanics with general relativity, thanks to an infinite set of conserved quantum numbers, “W-hair”, associated with topological soliton-like states. In this paper we extend these arguments to four dimensions, by considering explicitly the case of string black holes with radial symmetry. The key infinite-dimensional W-symmetry is associated with the SU(1, 1)/U(1) coset structure of the dilaton-graviton sector that is a model-independent feature of spherically symmetric four-dimensional strings. Arguments are also given that the enormous number of string discrete (topological) states account for the maintenance of quantum coherence during the (non-thermal) stringy evaporation process, as well as quenching the large Hawking-Bekenstein entropy associated with the black hole. Defining the latter as the measure of the loss of information for an observer at infinity, who-ignoring the higher string quantum numbers-keeps track only of the classical mass, angular momentum and change of the black hole, one recovers the familiar quadratic dependence on the black-hole mass by simple counting arguments on the asymptotic density of string states in a linear-dilaton background.hep-th/9112062CERN-TH-6351-91ACT-55CTP-TAMU-100-91ACT-55CERN-TH-6351-91CTP-TAMU-91-100oai:cds.cern.ch:2282951991-12-20 |
spellingShingle | Particle Physics - Theory Ellis, John R. Mavromatos, N.E. Nanopoulos, Dimitri V. Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory |
title | Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory |
title_full | Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory |
title_fullStr | Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory |
title_full_unstemmed | Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory |
title_short | Quantum Mechanics and Black Holes in Four-Dimensional String Theory |
title_sort | quantum mechanics and black holes in four-dimensional string theory |
topic | Particle Physics - Theory |
url | https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0370-2693(92)90189-B http://cds.cern.ch/record/228295 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT ellisjohnr quantummechanicsandblackholesinfourdimensionalstringtheory AT mavromatosne quantummechanicsandblackholesinfourdimensionalstringtheory AT nanopoulosdimitriv quantummechanicsandblackholesinfourdimensionalstringtheory |