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Search: L773:0370 1573 OR L773:1873 6270 > (2015-2019) > Black hole remnants...

Black hole remnants and the information loss paradox

Chen, P. (author)
Ong, Yen Chin (author)
Stockholms universitet,KTH,Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics NORDITA,Stockholm Univ, Sweden,Nordiska institutet för teoretisk fysik (Nordita)
Yeom, D-h. (author)
 (creator_code:org_t)
Elsevier, 2015
2015
English.
In: Physics reports. - : Elsevier. - 0370-1573 .- 1873-6270. ; 603, s. 1-45
  • Research review (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Forty years after the discovery of Hawking radiation, its exact nature remains elusive. If Hawking radiation does not carry any information out from the ever shrinking black hole, it seems that unitarity is violated once the black hole completely evaporates. On the other hand, attempts to recover information via quantum entanglement lead to the firewall controversy. Amid the confusions, the possibility that black hole evaporation stops with a "remnant" has remained unpopular and is often dismissed due to some "undesired properties" of such an object. Nevertheless, as in any scientific debate, the pros and cons of any proposal must be carefully scrutinized. We fill in the void of the literature by providing a timely review of various types of black hole remnants, and provide some new thoughts regarding the challenges that black hole remnants face in the context of the information loss paradox and its latest incarnation, namely the firewall controversy. The importance of understanding the role of curvature singularity is also emphasized, after all there remains a possibility that the singularity cannot be cured even by quantum gravity. In this context a black hole remnant conveniently serves as a cosmic censor. We conclude that a remnant remains a possible end state of Hawking evaporation, and if it contains large interior geometry, may help to ameliorate the information loss paradox and the firewall controversy. We hope that this will raise some interests in the community to investigate remnants more critically but also more thoroughly.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Fysik (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Physical Sciences (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Black hole remnants
Black hole information paradox
Black hole firewall
Singularity in general relativity and quantum gravity

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Chen, P.
Ong, Yen Chin
Yeom, D-h.
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NATURAL SCIENCES
NATURAL SCIENCES
and Physical Science ...
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Physics reports
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Royal Institute of Technology
Stockholm University

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