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Black Hole as a Window to HigherDimensional Gravity

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Title: Black Hole as a Window to HigherDimensional Gravity


1
Black Hole as a Window to Higher-Dimensional
Gravity
  • Cosmophysics Group, IPNS, KEK
  • Hideo Kodama

Black Hole and Singularity Workshop at TIFR, 3
10 March 2006
2
Contents
  • 4D black holes
  • Rigidity, uniqueness, stability
  • Cosmic censorship, singularities
  • Black holes in higher dimensions
  • Static black holes, generalised Weyl formulation
  • Black ring, non-uniqueness
  • SUGRA version, soliton method, black saturn
  • Instabilities
  • Gregory-Laflamme instability
  • Instability of higher-dimensional black holes
  • Brane world black hole
  • Discussions

3
Black Holes in Four Dimensions
4
What Is A Black Hole?
  • Definition(?)
  • Mathematical the outside of the causal past of
    a global hyperbolic domain of outer-communication.
  • Practical a spacetime region whose boundary is a
    stationary null surface (a Killing horizon).
  • Why does it exist?
  • Examples
  • Schwarzschild bh (1916)
  • Reissner-Nordstrom bh (1916)
  • Kerr bh (1963)
  • Kerr-Newman bh (1965)

5
Rigidity Theorems
  • Rigidity
  • Some symmetry requirement ? higher symmetries
  • Static black holes
  • Israel 1967 Bunting, Masood-ul-alam 1987
  • Cf. Birkhoffs theorem spherically symmetric ?
    static
  • Cf. The corresponding statement about a normal
    star has not been proved in general relativity
    yet.
  • Rotating black holes
  • Hawking 1973 Chrusciel 1996

A regular static non-degenerate black hole in
(electro-)vacuum is spherically symmetric.
A regular stationary rotating black hole in
(electro-)vacuum is axisymmetric.
6
Topology of Black Holes
  • Positive Energy Theorem
  • ? The horizon of a non-degenerate static black
    hole is connected.
  • Topological Censorship Theorem
  • ? Each connected component of the horizon of a 4D
    black hole is a sphere.

An asymptotically flat regular (black hole)
spacetime has a non-negative mass if the dominant
energy condition is satisfied. In particular, it
is flat if the ADM mass on an initial surface is
zero. Schoen, Yau 1979
The domain of outer communication (the region
outside a black hole) is simply connected if the
strong energy condition is satisfied and the
spacetime is asymptotically flat. Friedman,
Schleich, Witt 1993
7
Uniqueness Theorems
  • Static Black Holes
  • Israel 1967, Bunting-Masood-ul-Alam 1987
  • Rotating Black Holes
  • Hawking, Carter 1972 Mazur 1982, Chrusciel
    1996

An asymptotically flat, regular, non-degenerate
and static black hole in electrovacu spacetime is
spherically symmetric and uniquely determined by
mass and charge (Reissner-Nordstrom solution)..
An asymptotically flat, regular analytic,
stationary and rotating black hole in electrovacu
spacetime is axisymmetric and uniquely determined
by mass, charge and angular momentum (Kerr-Newman
solution), if the horizon is connected.
8
Physical Implications
  • Stability
  • Schwarzschild/Reissner-Nordstrom black holes
  • Vishveshwara 1970 Chandrasekar 1983
  • Kerr black hole Whiting 1989
  • Weak Cosmic Censorship Hypothesis
  • Cf. Singularity Theorem Penrose, Hawking
    1965-70
  • ?Predictability in astrophysics

Singularities formed by gravitational collapse
will be hidden inside horizon. Penrose 1969
Black holes in accretion disks and at galactic
centres will be well described by the
Kerr(-Newman) solution.
9
Horizon and singularity of the TS2
Kodama Hikida, Class.Quant.Grav.205121-5140,200
3
10
Classification of Regular AF BHs in Four
Dimensions
11
Black Holes in Higher Dimensions
12
What are Different in Higher Dimensions?
  • Gravitational potential
  • ? No stable Kepler orbit (and no stable atom) if
    the spacetime dimension is higher than 4.
  • Topological properties
  • Topological censorship theorem holds in higher
    dimensions as well.
  • However, there are a veriety of closed manifolds
    of dimesion 3 or higher that are cobordant to a
    sphere by a simply connected manifold.

13
Static AF Black Holes are Unique and Stable
  • Vacuum unique (Tangherlini-Schwarzschild)
  • S. Hwang(1998), Rogatko(2003)
  • Tangherlini-Schwarzschild bh stable
  • Ishibashi Kodama 2003
  • Einstein-Maxwell unique (HD RN or
    Majumdar-Papapetrou)
  • Gibbons, Ida Shiromizu(2002), Rogatko(2003)
  • Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton system (non-degenerate)
  • unique (Gibbons-Maeda sol) Gibbons, Ida
    Shiromizu(2002)
  • Einstein-Harmonic scalar system (non-degenerate)
  • unique (Tangherlini-Schwarzschild) Rogatko
    (2002)

14
Generalised Weyl Formulation
  • For RD-2 symmetric spacetime of dimension D,
  • the Einstein equations reduce to a linear PDE
    system
  • Utilising this formulation in four dimensions,
    we can construct the Israel-Kahn solutions that
    represent chains of black holes supported by
    struts or strings, as superpositions of
    Schwarzschild black holes.

strut
15
Static Black Ring Solution
  • In five dimensions, utilising the generalised
    Weyl formulation, we can construct a static
    asymptotically flat black hole solution whose
    horizon has non-trivial topology S1 S2
    Emparan, Reall 2002

16
Rotating Regular Black Ring Solution
The membrane singularity of a black ring can be
removed by rotation. Emparen, Reall 2002
  • Asymptotically flat regular solution with two
    parameters R, ?
  • Non-trivial horizon topology S1 S2
  • Rotating in a special 2-plane (in the S1
    direction).
  • where 0lt?lt1.
  • Non-unique the parameter ? can not be uniquely
    determined only by the asymptotic conserved
    charges M and J.

17
Rotating Black Holes Are Not Unique
  • For the 5-dim vacuum system, there exist two
    families of stationary 'axisymmetric' regular
    solutions
  • Myers-Perry solution (1986) 3 params, horizon
  • Emparan-Reall solution (2002) 2 params, horizon

18
Infinite Non-uniqueness
  • Black Rings with Dipole Charges
  • For the Einstein-Maxwell(-Dilaton) system, there
    exists a continuous family of regular black ring
    solutions parametrized by a dipole charge Q for
    fixed mass and angular momenta Emparan (2004)
  • The dipole charge Q appears in the thermodynamic
    formula

19
Supersymmetric Black Rings
  • Rigidity theorem
  • Rigidity theorem still holds in higher
    dimensions, but only guarantees the existence of
    one spatial U(1) symmetry.
  • Hollands, Ishibashi, Wald 2006
  • Since the ER solution and the 5D MP solution have
    the spatial U(1)x U(1) symmetry, it was
    conjectured that there would be a less symmetric
    new solution. Reall 2002
  • Reduction to a linear system for BPS solutions
  • General supersymmetric solutions to the minimal
    and extended 5-dim SUGRA were completely
    classified. Gauntlett et al 2003
  • A subfamily of these solutions can be described
    by a set of harmonic functions.
  • Superpositions of black rings and holes
  • Utilising this formulation
  • a supersymmetric black ring solution in 5D with
    J? ?0 and J??0 was found. Elvang, Emparan,
    Mateos, Reall 2004
  • Solutions with only one spatial U(1) symmetry
    were constructed by superpositions of black rings
    solutions.Gauntlett, Gutowski 2004

20
General Vacuum Black Ring
  • Belinsky-Sakharov method
  • A systematic method to derive a new solution from
    a given solution by adding solitons utilising the
    inverse scattering type formulation this method
    can be applied to spacetimes with R D-2 symmetry.
  • In four dimensions, this method was not so useful
    to obtain a new regular black hole solution
    because of the uniqueness theorem.
  • In five dimensions, we can use this method to
    obtain new regular black hole/ring solutions.
    Mishima, Iguchi, Tomizawa 2006
  • Pomeranski-Senkov solution
  • A rotating black ring solution with J? ?0 and
    J??0 was constructed by this method. Pomeranski,
    Senkov 2006
  • The regularity of this solution has not been
    exactly shown yet.

21
Black Saturn
  • A superposition of a black hole and a black ring
    can be constructed by the Belinsky-Sakharov
    method. Elvang, Figueras 2007
  • A family of regular asymptotically flat vacuum
    solutions with 4 independent parameters in 5
    dimensions.
  • The horizon is a disjoint sum of S3 and S2 S1 .
  • There exists a non-static subfamily with
    vanishing total angular momentum and one extra
    parameter in addition to mass. For these
    solutions, the central black hole and the black
    ring are counter rotating.

22
Instabilities
23
Black Brane
  • Direct-product-type spacetime
  • Vacuum Einstein equations
  • For D 4, possible solutions are locally
  • For D 5, there are infinitely many solutions if
    m 4
  • e.g.

24
Gregory-Laflamme Instability
  • Black branes are unstable against S-mode
    perturbations
  • with Gregory
    Laflamme 1993

25
  • The effective potential V has a negative region
    for

26
Implication of Gregory-Laflamme Instability
  • Non-uniqueness of black holes in spacetimes SxM
  • Kudoh Wiseman 2003, 2004

27
Fate of Instability
  • Naked Singularities
  • Due to the famous theorem by Hawking and Ellis, a
    black hole horizon cannot bifurcate without
    formation of naked singularities.
  • Further, it was shown that even if naked
    singularities are allowed, a black string cannot
    be pinched off to localised black holes within a
    finite affine time. Horowitz Maeda 2001
  • Nevertheless, some people argue that such a
    pinching off can be realised in a finite time
    with respect to some observers.
  • Kaluza-Klein Bubbles
  • In addition to the black string, non-uniform
    black string and caged black holes, there is a
    large family of solutions consisting of black
    holes and static Kaluza-Klein bubbles Elvang
    Horowitz 2003Elvang, Harmark Obers 2005

28
Instability of Rotating BH and BR
  • Rapidly rotating black holes may be unstable in
    higher dimensions.
  • The metric of the MP solution rotating in a 2-dim
    plane approaches a black membrane solution near
    the rotation axis in the high rotation limit
    for Dgt5. Emparan, Myers 2003
  • An asymptotically AdS black hole rotating in a
    special way is unstable when the angular momentum
    is sufficiently large. Kunduri, Lucietti, Reall
    2006
  • Cf. An asymptotically AdS black hole rotating in
    a 2-dim plane is stable for the same type of
    perturbations when ? is sufficiently large. HK
    2007
  • Sufficiently thin black rings will be unstable.
  • In the thin limit, the Emparan-Reall solution
    approaches a boosted black string solution.
    Emparan, Reall 2002

29
Braneworld Model
  • A braneworld model provides another method of
    dimensional reduction
  • Our universe is realised as a hypersurface called
    a brane in a bulk spacetime.
  • Low energy matter lives only In the brane, while
    gravity lives in the bulk.
  • In the Randal-Sundrum model, the bulk is an
    anti-de Sitter spacetime with Z2 symmetry, and
    the brane is the fixed hypersurface of this
    symmetry.

30
Braneworld Black Hole
  • 4-dim Braneworld Model
  • SO(2) symmetric static regular bh solution is
    obtained from a half of the C-metric. The conic
    singularity associated with a string is hidden
    behind the brane.Empran,Gregory,Santos 2001
  • 5-dim Braneworld Model
  • SO(3) symmetric static regular bh solution yet
    to be found should have naked singularity or
    non-compact horizon back behind the brane,
    provided that a regular static AdS bh is unique.
    Chamblin,Hawking,Reall 2000Kodama 2002
  • The existence of an tublar horizon extending to
    infinity is quite likely. This suggests the
    instability of the solution. Kodama 2007

31
Discussions
32
Implications
  • In higher dimensions, black holes are far from
    unique and often unstable.
  • ?
  • Higher-dimensional classical gravity is quite
    rich and fascinating.
  • There may not exist a final state for classical
    gravitational collapse in higher dimensions (at
    least if supersymmetry is broken).
  • This feature together with quantum physics may
    explain the four-dimensionality of the low energy
    world.
  • In the AdS/CFT perspective, this implies the
    non-existence of thermal equilibrium states in
    CFTs or the severe break down of the AdS/CFT
    correspondence when SUSY is violated.

33
Open Problems
  • Black Hole Classification
  • For each horizon topology, is there a single
    continuous family of black holes?
  • How large is the maximum number of parameters
    characterising a black hole/ring family ?
  • Is there a black ring solution for Dgt5 ?
  • Is there an asymptotically AdS black ring?
  • Black Hole/Brane Stability
  • What is the fate of the Gregory-Laflamme
    instability?
  • Are Myers-Perry solutions and black ring
    solutions stable?
  • Does the horizon area really provide a criteria
    for stability?
  • Develop a tractible formulation for perturbations
    of a rotating black hole/ring in higher dimensions
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