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Particle creation in gravitational collapse to a horizonless compact object

Black holes (BHs) play a central role in physics. However, gathering observational evidence for their existence is a notoriously difficult task. Current strategies to quantify the evidence for BHs all boil down to looking for signs of highly compact, horizonless bodies. Here, we study particle creat...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Harada, Tomohiro, Cardoso, Vitor, Miyata, Daiki
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.99.044039
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2649599
Descripción
Sumario:Black holes (BHs) play a central role in physics. However, gathering observational evidence for their existence is a notoriously difficult task. Current strategies to quantify the evidence for BHs all boil down to looking for signs of highly compact, horizonless bodies. Here, we study particle creation by objects which collapse to form ultracompact configurations, with the surface at an areal radius R=Rf satisfying 1-(2M/Rf)=ε2≪1 with M the object mass. We assume that gravitational collapse proceeds in a “standard” manner until R=Rf+2Mε2β, where β>0, and then slows down to form a static object of radius Rf. In the standard collapsing phase, Hawking-like thermal radiation is emitted, which is as strong as the Hawking radiation of a BH with the same mass but lasts only for ∼40(M/M⊙)[44+ln(10-19/ε)]  μs. Thereafter, in a very large class of models, there exist two bursts of radiation separated by a very long dormant stage. The first burst occurs at the end of the transient Hawking radiation and is followed by a quiescent stage which lasts for ∼6×106(ε/10-19)-1(M/M⊙)  yr. Afterwards, the second burst is triggered, after which there is no more particle production and the star is forever dark. In a model with β=1, both the first and second bursts outpower the transient Hawking radiation by a factor ∼1038(ε/10-19)-2.