4,919 research outputs found
Comments on black holes I: The possibility of complementarity
We comment on a recent paper of Almheiri, Marolf, Polchinski and Sully who
argue against black hole complementarity based on the claim that an infalling
observer 'burns' as he approaches the horizon. We show that in fact
measurements made by an infalling observer outside the horizon are
statistically identical for the cases of vacuum at the horizon and radiation
emerging from a stretched horizon. This forces us to follow the dynamics all
the way to the horizon, where we need to know the details of Planck scale
physics. We note that in string theory the fuzzball structure of microstates
does not give any place to 'continue through' this Planck regime. AMPS argue
that interactions near the horizon preclude traditional complementarity. But
the conjecture of 'fuzzball complementarity' works in the opposite way: the
infalling quantum is absorbed by the fuzzball surface, and it is the resulting
dynamics that is conjectured to admit a complementary description.Comment: 34 pages, 6 figures, v3: clarifications & references adde
Black hole microstate geometries from string amplitudes
In this talk we review recent calculations of the asymptotic supergravity
fields sourced by bound states of D1 and D5-branes carrying travelling waves.
We compute disk one-point functions for the massless closed string fields. At
large distances from the branes, the effective open string coupling is small,
even in the regime of parameters where the classical D1-D5-P black hole may be
considered. The fields sourced by the branes differ from the black hole
solution by various multipole moments, and have led to the construction of a
new 1/8-BPS ansatz in type IIB supergravity.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, Contribution to the proceedings of the Black
Objects in Supergravity School, Frascati, 201
From Black Holes to Glueballs: The QCD_3 Tensor Glueball at Strong Coupling
A strong coupling calculation of glueball masses based on the duality between
supergravity and Yang-Mills theory is presented. Earlier work is extended to
non-zero spin. Fluctuations in the gravitational metric lead to the 2^{++}
state on the leading Pomeron trajectory with a mass relation: m(0^{++}) <
m(2^{++}) < m(1^{-+}). Contrary to expectation, the mass of our new 0^{++}
state (m^2=5.4573) associated with the graviton is smaller than the mass of the
state (m^2=11.588) from the dilaton, which in fact is exactly
degenerate with the tensor 2^{++}.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, Talk at Lattice 99 by R. Browe
Persistent and radiation-induced currents in distorted quantum rings
Persistent and radiation-induced currents in distorted narrow quantum rings
are theoretically investigated. We show that ring distorsions can be described
using a geometrical potential term. We analyse the effect of this term on the
current induced by a magnetic flux (persistent current) and by a polarized
coherent electromagnetic field (radiation-induced current). The strongest
effects in persistent currents are observed for distorted rings with a small
number of electrons. The distortion smoothes the current oscillations as a
function of the magnetic flux and changes the temperature dependence of the
current amplitude. For radiation-induced currents, the distortion induces an ac
component in the current and affects its dependence on the radiation frequency
and intensity
The information paradox: A pedagogical introduction
The black hole information paradox is a very poorly understood problem. It is
often believed that Hawking's argument is not precisely formulated, and a more
careful accounting of naturally occurring quantum corrections will allow the
radiation process to become unitary. We show that such is not the case, by
proving that small corrections to the leading order Hawking computation cannot
remove the entanglement between the radiation and the hole. We formulate
Hawking's argument as a `theorem': assuming `traditional' physics at the
horizon and usual assumptions of locality we will be forced into mixed states
or remnants. We also argue that one cannot explain away the problem by invoking
AdS/CFT duality. We conclude with recent results on the quantum physics of
black holes which show the the interior of black holes have a `fuzzball'
structure. This nontrivial structure of microstates resolves the information
paradox, and gives a qualitative picture of how classical intuition can break
down in black hole physics.Comment: 38 pages, 7 figures, Latex (Expanded form of lectures given at CERN
for the RTN Winter School, Feb 09), typo correcte
Deforming the D1D5 CFT away from the orbifold point
The D1D5 brane bound state is believed to have an `orbifold point' in its
moduli space which is the analogue of the free Yang Mills theory for the D3
brane bound state. The supergravity geometry generated by D1 and D5 branes is
described by a different point in moduli space, and in moving towards this
point we have to deform the CFT by a marginal operator: the `twist' which links
together two copies of the CFT. In this paper we find the effect of this
deformation operator on the simplest physical state of the CFT -- the Ramond
vacuum. The twist deformation leads to a final state that is populated by pairs
of excitations like those in a squeezed state. We find the coefficients
characterizing the distribution of these particle pairs (for both bosons and
fermions) and thus write this final state in closed form.Comment: 30 pages, 4 figures, Late
Excitations in the deformed D1D5 CFT
We perform some simple computations for the first order deformation of the
D1D5 CFT off its orbifold point. It had been shown earlier that under this
deformation the vacuum state changes to a squeezed state (with the further
action of a supercharge). We now start with states containing one or two
initial quanta and write down the corresponding states obtained under the
action of deformation operator. The result is relevant to the evolution of an
initial excitation in the CFT dual to the near extremal D1D5 black hole: when a
left and a right moving excitation collide in the CFT, the deformation operator
spreads their energy over a larger number of quanta, thus evolving the state
towards the infrared.Comment: 26 pages, Latex, 4 figure
A (1,2) Heterotic String with Gauge Symmetry
We construct a (1,2) heterotic string with gauge symmetry and determine its
particle spectrum. This theory has a local N=1 worldsheet supersymmetry for
left movers and a local N=2 worldsheet supersymmetry for right movers and
describes particles in either two or three space-time dimensions. We show that
fermionizing the bosons of the compactified N=1 space leads to a particle
spectrum which has nonabelian gauge symmetry. The fermionic formulation of the
theory corresponds to a dimensional reduction of self dual Yang Mills. We also
give a worldsheet action for the theory and calculate the one-loop path
integral.Comment: 17 pages, added reference
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