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UPTEC F07 085 Examensarbete 20 p Augusti 2007 Calculation of Hawking Radiation as Quantum Mechanical Tunneling Petra Lange Abstract Calculation of Hawking Radiation as Quantum Mechanical Tunneling Petra Lange Teknisk- naturvetenskaplig fakultet UTH-enheten Besöksadress: Ångströmlaboratoriet Lägerhyddsvägen 1 Hus 4, Plan 0 Postadress: Box 536 751 21 Uppsala The Hawking radiation derived from quantum field theory shows a spectrum that is precisely thermal. In this thesis, the Hawking radiation is derived as a tunneling process through the event horizon of a black hole. The tunneling rate is related to the imaginary part of the action of the tunneling particle. Since energy conservation is respected in the calculation, the obtained tunneling rate correponds to a spectrum which is not precisely thermal but has an additional correction term. Telefon: 018 – 471 30 03 Telefax: 018 – 471 30 00 Hemsida: http://www.teknat.uu.se/student Handledare: Joseph Minahan Ämnesgranskare: Ulf Lindström Examinator: Tomas Nyberg ISSN: 1401-5757, UPTEC F07 085 Contents 1 Introduction 2 2 Quantum Field Theory 2 2.1 Quantum Field Theory in Flat Spacetime . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 2.2 Quantum Field Theory in Curved Spacetime . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.3 Surface Gravity and Hawking Radiation . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 3 The WKB-approximation 12 4 Hawking Radiation as Tunneling 15 4.1 The Painlevé Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 4.2 Particle Tunneling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 4.3 Anti-particle Tunneling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 5 Discussion 21 1 1 Introduction Classically, anything that enters a black hole is trapped, without any possibility to escape. In 1974, Stephen Hawking showed that, quantum mechanically, black holes aren’t really black but radiate energy continuously. Hawking used the technique of quantum field theory in his calculation, but the radiation can also be described as pair production near the horizon followed by quantum mechanical tunneling of one of the particles. The purpose of this thesis is to carry out a detailed calculation of the Hawking radiation from a Schwarzschild black hole, by tunneling of a massless shell through the event horizon of the black hole. The thesis consists of three main parts. The first part gives a description of quantum field theory in curved spacetime and how Hawking radiation arises because of the curvature of spacetime. This part is mainly based on Carroll’s book Spacetime and Geometry [1] but also Peskin and Schroeder [2] has been studied. The second part describes the WKB-approximation method. This part is based on Bransden and Joachain’s book Quantum Mechanics [3], where the method is described in detail. In the third part of the thesis the calculation of Hawking radiation as tunneling is carried out. This part is based on one paper of Parikh and Wilczek [4] and two papers of Parikh [5] and [6]. 2 Quantum Field Theory In quantum mechanics, the quantization of single particles is described. This description is suitable when the kinetic energy is much less than the rest mass. At high energies, the relativistic theory makes creation and annihilation of particles possible and the description in terms of single particles fails. Quantum field theory describes the quantization of fields and is a suitable description at high energies, since creation and annihilation of particles are allowed. A quantum field is a way to describe a system of infinitely many particles. In this section quantum field theory in flat spacetime and curved spacetime is treated. In curved spacetime a general metric and a static metric are considered. 2.1 Quantum Field Theory in Flat Spacetime In classical field theory, the simplest field is the real scalar field φ(xµ ). The equation of motion for the real scalar field of mass m in Minkowski space is 2 the Klein-Gordon equation η µν ∂µ ∂ν φ − m2 φ = 0. (2.1) This equation is solved by the plane wave φ = φ0 e−ωt+ik·x . (2.2) The frequency ω is related to the wave vector k by the dispersion relation ω 2 = k2 + m2 . (2.3) The dispersion relation only determines the frequency of the solution up to a sign. Therefore, there is not just one single solution to the Klein-Gordon equation, but an entire set of mode solutions. The set is parametrized by the wave vector k and the sign of the frequency ω. If the set is complete and orthonormal, it can be used to express the general solution to the KleinGordon equation. To make sense of “orthonormal”, an inner product must be defined on the space of solutions. An appropriate inner product is ! (φ1 , φ2 ) = −i (φ1 ∂t φ∗2 − φ∗2 ∂t φ1 ), (2.4) Σt where Σt is a constant-time hypersurface. For an orthonormal set {fk } (fk1 , fk2 ) = δ n−1 (k1 − k2 ), (2.5) so that the inner product vanishes unless the wave vectors k are equal for both modes. Since the frequency is only determined up to a sign by the wave vector, a mode fk is said to be positive-frequency if it satisfies ∂t fk = −iωfk , ω > 0. (2.6) Complex conjugation of a mode changes the sign of the frequency, so the complex conjugate fk∗ of the mode satisfies ∂t fk∗ = iωfk∗ , ω > 0, (2.7) and is therefore said to be negative frequency. The complex conjugate modes are orthonormal to each other but with negative norm (fk∗1 , fk∗2 ) = −δ n−1 (k1 − k2 ), 3 (2.8) and they are orthogonal to the original modes (fk1 , fk∗2 ) = 0. (2.9) The set is complete by including the conjugate modes. Expanding the solution to the Klein-Gordon equation in terms of the modes gives ! φ= d3 k (ck fk + c∗k fk∗ ) . (2.10) On quantization, the classical field φ(xµ ) becomes an operator that satisfies the canonical commutation relations [φ(t, x), φ(t, x# )] = 0 [π(t, x), π(t, x# )] = 0 [φ(t, x), φ(t, x# )] = δ (n−1) (x − x# ). The field operator φ(t, x) is then ! " # φ(t, x) = dn−1 k âk fk (t, x) + â†k fk∗ (t, x) . (2.11) (2.12) The coefficients of the modes in equation (2.12) can now be interpreted as creation operators â†k and annihilation operators and âk . By inserting the expansion into (2.11), the creation and annihilation operators have the commutation relations [â $ k , âk’ ]%= 0 ↠, ↠= 0 (2.13) $ k k’ % âk , â†k’ = δ (n−1) (x − x# ). The creation and annihilation operators can be used to define a basis, where the basis states are the eigenstates of the number operator. The vacuum state |0" is a state that is annihilated by all annihilation operators, i.e. âk |0" = 0 for all k. (2.14) Excited states are created by repeated action by â†k . The number operator is defined by n̂k = â†k âk (2.15) and obeys n̂ki |n1 , n2 , ..., ni , ..., nj " = ni |n1 , n2 , ..., ni , ..., nj " . 4 (2.16) The basis formed by the eigenstates of the number operator is known as a Fock basis. By means of these eigenstates and the number operator, the number of particles seen by an observer can be described. A Lorentz transformation by velocity v = dx/dt will lead to the new ! coordinates xµ t# = γt − γv · x, x# = γx − γvt, (2.17) √ where γ = 1/ 1 − v 2 . Inverting the transformation gives t = γt# − γv · x# , x = γx# − γvt# . (2.18) The transformation of basis vectors is ∂xµ ∂ = ∂µ , ∂xµ! µ! (2.19) so the time derivative of the mode function can be expressed as ∂t! fk = ∂xµ ∂µ fk . ∂t# (2.20) From the inverse tranformation ∂t =γ ∂t# and ∂x = γv, ∂t# (2.21) and differentiating the mode function with respect to t and x gives ∂t fk = −iωfk and ∂x fk = ikfk . (2.22) The time derivative of the mode functions in the boosted frame is ∂t! fk = γ(−iω)fk + γv · (ik)fk = −iω # fk , (2.23) ω # = γω − γv · k (2.24) where is just the frequency in the boosted frame. The mode functions that were positive frequency in the original frame, are still positive frequency in the new boosted frame, but with boosted frequency. In Minkowski space, modes are classified as positive- and negative-frequency with respect to the time direction, which is a Killing vector. Since the Killing vectors are related by Lorentz transformations in Minkowski space, a mode that is positivefrequency in one frame will still be positive-frequency in a boosted frame, and observers will agree on the number of particles present. 5 2.2 Quantum Field Theory in Curved Spacetime When the theory is generalized to curved spacetime, some of the ideas that were essential in flat spacetime have to be given up. In this section a general metric is considered and the field φ(xµ ) is the real scalar field of mass m. The equation of motion for this field is g µν ∇µ ∇ν φ − m2 φ = 0, (2.25) [φ(t, x), φ(t, x# )] = 0 [π(t, x), π(t, x# )] = 0 i [φ(t, x), π(t, x# )] = √−g δ (n−1) (x − x# ), (2.26) where g µν is the inverse metric. The symbol ∇µ denotes the covariant derivative, which is the curved spacetime generalization of the partial derivative ∂µ . The theory is quantized by imposing the commutation relations where g is the determinant of the metric. An inner product on the solutions in curved spacetime is defined by ! √ (φ1 , φ2 ) = −i (φ1 ∇µ φ∗2 − φ∗2 ∇µ φ1 )nµ γdn−1 x. (2.27) Σ Here Σ is a spacelike hypersurface, nµ is a unit normal vector and γij is the induced metric from gµν on the hypersurface. Since a general metric is considered, the time direction is not necessarily a Killing vector. Therefore, the solutions to the equation of motion might not be separated into space-dependent and time-dependent parts, and the modes cannot be classified as positive- and negative-frequency. Still, a set of solutions {fi } can be found that are orthonormal (fi , fj ) = δij , (2.28) (fi∗ , fj∗ ) = −δij , (2.29) and for the conjugate modes. These modes can be chosen to be a complete set and the field operator can be expanded in terms of these modes # &" φ= âi fi + â†i fi† . (2.30) By (2.26), the annihilation and creation operators have the canonical commutation relations [â $ i , âj ]% = 0 ↠, ↠= 0 (2.31) $ i j% † âi , âj = δij 6 and there will be a vacuum state |0f " that is annihilated by all the annihilation operators, i.e. âi |0f " = 0 for all i. (2.32) By acting with the creation operator â†i , a Fock basis can be defined. The number operator is defined by n̂f i = â†i âi . (2.33) However, the basis modes fi are not unique. An alternative set of modes {gi } that has the same properties as the fi -modes can be used to expand the field operator # &" φ= b̂i gi + b̂†i gi∗ . (2.34) The creation and annihilation operators have the commutation relations $ % b̂i , b̂j = 0 % $ (2.35) b̂†i , b̂†j = 0 % $ b̂i , b̂†j = δij and there is a vacuum state |0g " for which b̂i |0g " = 0 for all i. (2.36) A number operator can also be defined by n̂gi = b̂†i b̂i . (2.37) A Fock basis for the g-observer can be constructed using this vacuum state and the creation operator just as well. In a general curved spacetime there is no reason to prefer one set of modes to any other. Every observer classifies modes to be positive- and negativefrequency with respect to his proper time and defines particles with respect to that set. There is no reason why they should agree on how many particles are detected. To see this, each set of modes can be expanded in terms of the other by the transformation ) ' ( gi = j (αij fj + βij fj∗) ' (2.38) ∗ fi = j αji gj − βji gj∗ . Such a transformation is known as a Bogolubov transformation, and the coefficients are known as Bogolubov coefficients. Since the mode functions are orthonormal, the coefficients can be found by αij = (gi , fj ) βij = −(gi , fj∗ ). 7 (2.39) The Bogolubov coefficients can also be used to express the operators in terms of each other, # ' " ∗ † âi = j αji b̂j + βji b̂j # (2.40) ' " b̂i = j αik âj + βij∗ â†j . If the f -observer is in a vacuum state where no particles are observed, it is now possible to find out how many particles are observed by the g-observer. This can be done by calculating the expectation value of the number operator of the g-mode in the f -vacuum & %0f | b̂†i b̂i |0f " = |βij |2 . (2.41) j If any of the coefficients βij are not vanishing, the g-observer will detect particles. This means that what looks empty to one observer might be filled with particles to another. In a static spacetime, the coordinates can be chosen so that the metric is independent of the time coordinate and no time-space cross terms are present ∂0 gµν = 0 g0i = 0. (2.42) Since the metric is independent of the time coordinate, the time direction is a Killing vector. If restrictions are made to only consider spherically symmetric metrics, the modes can be expressed in terms of the time coordinate t and the radial coordinate r. Now the equation of motion can be written on a form that separates time-dependent operators from space-dependent operators. The solution to such an equation can be separated into a time-dependent and a space-dependent factor fk (t, r) = e−iωk t fk (r). (2.43) Relative to t, these solutions can be described as positive-frequency ∂t fk (t, r) = −iωk fk (r), ω>0 (2.44) ω > 0. (2.45) and negative-frequency ∂t fk∗ (t, r) = iωk fk∗ (r), In a static spacetime two different observers should be considered. A static observer at infinity is one whose proper time τ is proportional to the Killing time t. The static observer can then classify the modes as positive- and 8 negative-frequency with respect to t and use the modes to express the field operator ! " # φ(t, r) = dk âk e−iωk t fk (r) + â†k eiωt fk∗ (r) . (2.46) These modes are singular at the horizon. A free-falling observer detects nothing abnormal when crossing the horizon. The modes of this observer are denoted by gk (t, r). Since the modes are regular at the horizon, a vacuum state |0g " can be defined that looks empty to the free-falling observer . The field operator expanded in terms of these modes is ! " # φ(t, r) = dk b̂k gk (t, r) + b̂†k gk∗ (t, r) . (2.47) To calculate how many particles the static observer will see when the freefalling observer is in the vacuum state, the annihilation and creation operators of the static observer can be expressed in terms of the creation and annihilation operators of the free-falling observer ! " # âk = dk # αk! k b̂k! + βk∗! k b̂†k! (2.48) where αkk! = (gk , fk! ) (2.49) βkk! = −(gk , fk∗! ). The average number of particles that will be observed by the static observer is ! † n̄k = %0g | âk âk |0g " = dk # |βkk! |2 . (2.50) From statistical mechanics, the average number of particles with energy ωk can be expressed as 1 n̄k = . (2.51) exp(ωk /T ) − 1 A derivation of this expression can be found in Mandl [7]. By using the density of states dωk /2π, the flux of outgoing particles with energies between ωk and ωk + dωk is 1 dωk . (2.52) F (ωk ) = 2π exp(ωk /T ) − 1 If |αkk! /βkk! | is independent of k # , the completeness relation ! ( ) dk # |αkk! |2 − |βkk! |2 = 1 (2.53) can be used to express the flux as 1 dωk F (ωk ) = . 2π |αkk! /βkk! |2 − 1 9 (2.54) 2.3 Surface Gravity and Hawking Radiation The event horizon of a black hole is a null hypersurface. This hypersurface separates the spacetime points that are connected to infinity by timelike paths from those points that are not. If a Killing vector field is null along some null hypersurface, the hypersurface is said to be a Killing horizon. In a static spacetime, the event horizon is a Killing horizon and the Killing vector field is K µ = (∂t )µ . To every Killing horizon, a quantity called surface gravity κ is associated. If the Killing vector χµ is null on the null hypersurface Σ, then χµ is a normal vector to Σ and obeys the geodesic equation χµ ∇µ χν = −κχν . (2.55) The right hand side arises because ξ µ may not be affinely parametrized. The parameter κ is the surface gravity, and it is constant over the horizon. In a static spacetime, the time-translation Killing vector ∂t can be normalized by Kµ K µ (r → ∞) = −1. (2.56) This fixes the surface gravity at the Killing horizon. For a static observer, the four-velocity is proportional to the time-translation Killing field K µ , where K µ = V (x)U µ . (2.57) The four-velocity is normalized to U µ Uµ = −1, so the function * V = −K µ Kµ , (2.58) which is the magnitude of the Killing field. By the normalization of K µ , V is zero at the horizon and unity at infinity. V is called the ”redshift factor” since it relates the emitted frequency to the observed frequency of a photon, measured by a static observer. The conserved energy of a photon with fourmomentum pµ is E = −pµ K µ while the frequency observed by an observer with four-velocity U µ is ω = −pµ U µ , therefore ω= E . V (2.59) The four-acceleration aµ can be expressed as aµ = U σ ∇σ U µ . The acceleration can be expressed in terms of the redshift factor aµ = ∇µ ln V. 10 (2.60) The magnitude of the acceleration is * a = V −1 ∇µ V ∇µ V . (2.61) This will go to infinity at the Killing horizon. The surface gravity can be shown to be * κ = V a = ∇µ V ∇µ V (2.62) and this is evaluated at the horizon. A free-falling observer near a black hole finds a scalar field to be in the vacuum state. A static observer right outside the black hole will not find a vacuum state but will see radiation. Since the static observer is very close to the horizon, he can be considered to have an acceleration a. The redshift factor at his position is V . The temperature of the observed radiation is T = a/2π. As the radiation propagates to infinity it will be redshifted. The temperature measured by the observer at infinity is T∞ = V V a T = . V∞ V∞ 2π (2.63) At infinity, the redshift factor V∞ → 1, so the observed temperature is T∞ = lim Va κ = . 2π 2π (2.64) The radiation that an observer far from the black hole will see is the Hawking radiation. The flux of radiation is thermal and it is proportional to the surface gravity of the black hole. For a Schwarzschild black hole the redshift factor is found to be + 2M (2.65) V = 1− r and the acceleration a= The surface gravity κ is M ( r2 1 − ) 2M 1/2 r . M . r2 Evaluating this at the event horizon gives the surface gravity κ=Va= κ= 1 4M 11 (2.66) (2.67) (2.68) for a Schwarzschild black hole. The temperature of the radiation measured by an observer at infinity is then T = 1 8πM (2.69) and this corresponds to a flux F (ω) = 3 1 dω . 2π exp(8πM ω) − 1 (2.70) The WKB-approximation The WKB-approximation is a method that can be used to find the wave function when the potential energy is a slowly varying function of position. It is a suitable method to use when penetration of a potential barrier is considered. The equation of motion for a particle of mass m that moves in a potential V (x) in one dimension is the Schrödinger equation − h̄2 d2 ψ(x) + V (x)ψ(x) = Eψ(x). 2m dx2 (3.1) When the potential is a function of position, the solution is on the form , i ψ(x) = ψ0 exp S(x) , (3.2) h̄ where ψ0 is a constant. Inserting this solution into the Schrödinger equation (3.1) gives ih̄ d2 S(x) 1 + − 2 2m dx 2m , dS(x) dx -2 + V (x) − E = 0. (3.3) This equation is non-linear and difficult to solve and therefore an approximation is needed. In the classical limit h̄ → 0. This means that h̄ can be used as a parameter of smallness and the function S(x) can be expanded in the power series h̄2 S(x) = S0 (x) + h̄S1 (x) + S2 (x) + ... 2 12 (3.4) In the classical limit S(x) = S0 (x). Inserting the expansion into equation (3.3) gives , -2 1 dS0 (x) + V (x) − E = 0 (3.5) 2m dx dS0 (x) dS1 (x) i d2 S0 (x) − =0 (3.6) dx dx 2 dx2 , -2 d2 S1 (x) dS1 (x) dS0 (x) dS2 (x) −i + =0 (3.7) + 2 dx dx dx dx Solving the first equation gives S0 = ± ! x p(x# )dx# , (3.8) * where p(x) = 2m(E − V (x)) is the momentum at the point x. Using this result in the second equation gives S1 (x) = i ln p(x). 2 (3.9) By (3.8) and (3.9) the WKB-approximation of the wave function in a classically allowed region (E > V ) is , ! x i −1/2 # # ψ(x) = A (p(x)) exp p(x )dx (3.10) h̄ , ! i x # # −1/2 +B (p(x)) exp − p(x )dx . h̄ The plus-sign corresponds to a wave moving in the positive x-direction and the minus-sign corrsponds to a wave moving in the negative x-direction. An approximation to the wave function can be obtained in classically forbidden regions (E < V ) as well, and in this region the momentum p(x) is imaginary. The wave function in this region is , ! 1 x −1/2 # # (3.11) |p(x )| dx ψ(x) = C |p(x)| exp − h̄ , ! x 1 −1/2 # # +D |p(x)| exp |p(x )| dx . h̄ The criterion of validity for the WKB-approximation is . . . h̄ dp(x) . . . . (p(x))2 dx . << 1. 13 (3.12) V (x) " E 1 2 3 ! a b x Figure 3.1: A potential barrier of height V(x). Incident particles have energy E. The points a and b are classical turning points. This criterion can be derived from the solution of equation (3.7) and is satisfied if the potential energy V (x) varies slowly, provided that the kinetic energy E − V (x) is large enough. The WKB-solution will therefore not be a suitable approximation close the points where E = V (x). A potential barrier of height V (x) is described in Figure 3.1. The barrier can be split into three different regions, which are denoted 1, 2 and 3 in the figure. There are two classical turning points a and b where E = V . The WKB-solutions (3.10) and (3.11) are only accurate far away from the turning points. To find a solution that is valid near the turning points, the classical momentum p2 (x) is approximated by p2 (x) ( A(x − x1 ). By this approximation a “new” Schrödinger equation is obtained, which can be solved exactly at the turning points and is a good approximation to the solution of the Schrödinger equation far from the turning points. In this way, the solutions to the new approximate Schrödinger equation are connection formulae for the WKB-solutions. If particles are assumed to be incident from the left, some of the them will be reflected back into region 1, others will be transmitted through region 2 and emerge into region 3. In the third region the wave function is , ! x i # # −1/2 (3.13) p(x )dx , x > b ψ3 (x) = A (p(x)) exp h̄ b which describes a wave moving in the positive x-direction. By the connection formulae, the solution in region 2 is , ! b 1 −1/2 # # ψ2 (x) = −i A |p(x)| exp |p(x )| dx , a < x < b (3.14) h̄ x 14 This wave function can be rewritten as a decreasing exponential for x > a , ! −1 x −1/2 Λ # # |p(x )| dx , a < x < b (3.15) ψ2 (x) = −i A |p(x)| e exp h̄ a where 1 Λ= h̄ ! b a |p(x)| dx. The solution in region 1 turns out to be , ! i x −1/2 Λ # # ψ1 (x) = −i (p(x)) e exp ± |p(x )| dx , h̄ a (3.16) x < a. (3.17) The plus-sign is a right moving wave and corresponds to the incoming wave and the minus-sign is a left moving wave which corresponds to the reflected wave. The probability current density associated with this wave is j = v(|A|2 − |B|2 ) = v # |C|2 , (3.18) where A, B and C are amplitudes of an incident, reflected and transmitted wave respectively. v and v # are magnitudes of the velocities of the incident and reflected waves. From this relation |B|2 v # |C|2 + = 1. v |A|2 |A|2 (3.19) The transmission coefficient T is defined to be T = v # |C|2 . v |A|2 (3.20) By using the transmitted and incident wave functions (3.13) and (3.17), the transmission coefficient can be evaluated. The ratio of the velocities is equal to the ratio of the corresponding momenta. This gives the transmission coefficient , ! 2 b −2Λ T =e = exp − |p(x)| dx . (3.21) h̄ a 4 Hawking Radiation as Tunneling Although Stephen Hawking used the technique of quantum field theory in his calculation, the radiation is often pictured as tunneling. According to 15 this picture, the radiation arises by pair creation just outside or inside the event horizon followed by tunneling of one of the particles through the horizon. In this section, this schematic picture will be used to actually calculate the Hawing radiation. A description of the appropriate coordinates is given before the calculation is carried out. 4.1 The Painlevé Coordinates Since the tunneling process takes place at the horizon, it is important that the coordinate system behaves well there. The Schwarzschild metric , -−1 , 2M 2M 2 2 ds = − 1 − dts + 1 − dr2 + r2 dΩ2 (4.1) r r is singular at the horizon since some of its components diverge and is therefore not suitable to use. By defining a new time-coordinate √ √ √ r − 2M √ t = ts − 2 2M r + 2M ln √ (4.2) r + 2M and inserting it into the Schwarzschild metric, the line element + , 2M 2M 2 2 ds = − 1 − dt + 2 dtdr + dr2 + r2 dΩ2 r r (4.3) is obtained. The coordinates are known as the Painlevé coordinates. In these coordinates, the metric is well-behaved at the horizon. Since all metric components are independent of the time coordinate t, the time direction is a Killing vector. There are, however, time-space cross terms so the metric is stationary but not static. The Painlevé time t is precisely the proper time τ of a radially free-falling observer. Modes can therefore be classified as positive- and negative-frequency relative to t, and a vacuum state can be defined which annihilates modes that are negative frequency with respect to t. Since the proper time τ is proportional to t, the free-falling observer will see the vacuum state as empty. The radial null geodesics can be found by + , 2M 2M dt2 + 2 dtdr + dr2 , (4.4) 0 = ds2 = − 1 − r r which leads to 2 +1 − 2M 2 r ṙ = −1 − 2M r outgoing geodesics ingoing geodesics. 16 (4.5) When the particle is inside the black hole, r decreases for both ingoing and outgoing trajectories so the particle is trapped inside the horizon. When self-gravitation of the particle is taken into account, these equations are changed. Self-gravitating particles were studied by Kraus and Wilczek [8]. By treating the particle as a spherical shell and using Hamiltonian methods to solve the constraints of the theory, the gravitational degrees of freedom were eliminated and an expression for the effective action of the shell was obtained, ! S = dt(pr ṙ − M+ ). (4.6) Here pr is the canonical momentum conjugate of r and M+ is the total mass of the gravity-shell system, as seen from infinity. The solution r(t) to the equations of motion that are obtained by extremizing (4.6), are the radial null geodesics of the metric 3 42 + 2M + ds2 = −dt2 + dr + dt + r2 dΩ2 . (4.7) r This is the same line element as in (4.3), but with M replaced by M+ . When the black hole mass M is held fixed and the total mass M+ is allowed to vary, the total mass as seen from infinity is M+ = M + ω, where ω is the energy of the shell. When instead the total mass is held fixed and the black hole mass is allowed to vary, the mass M in (4.3) is replaced by M − ω. 4.2 Particle Tunneling When a virtual particle pair is created just inside the horizon, the positive energy particle tunnels outwards through the horizon. Outside the horizon it materializes as a real particle and can escape to infinity, where it appears as radiation. By energy conservation, the mass of the black hole must go down when the particle is radiated. For black holes, the mass is related to the radius. When the mass goes down, the hole shrinks and the radius of the horizon decreases. Tunneling through a potential barrier was described in section 3. By (3.21), the tunneling rate is related to the imaginary part of the action in the classically forbidden region. The tunneling rate of a particle out of a black hole is therefore , ! rout Γ ∼ exp −2 Im pr dr . (4.8) rin 17 The barrier arises because the horizon shrinks and the particle starts just inside the initial position rin = 2M of the horizon and materializes just outside the final position rout = 2(M − ω) of the horizon. When the outgoing wave is traced back towards the horizon, its characteristic wavelength is infinitely blueshifted. This means that the geometry is slowly varying over the wavelength and therefore the WKB-approximation can be applied. To calculate the tunneling rate the imaginary part of the action ! rout Im S = Im pr dr (4.9) rin is evaluated. The radial momentum pr can be written as an integral ! rout ! rout ! pr Im S = Im pr dr = Im dp#r dr. (4.10) rin rin 0 By Hamiltons equation, dH = ṙ dpr the variable is changed from momentum to energy ! rout ! M −ω dH Im S = Im dr. ṙ rin M The variable is changed again from H to ω # ! rout ! +ω −dω # dr. Im S = Im ṙ rin 0 (4.11) (4.12) (4.13) The particle moves on the outgoing geodesic obtained in equation (4.5), but with the mass M replaced by M − ω # . When the total energy is held fixed and the black hole energy is allowed to vary, it is the metric inside the shell that determines the motion. Inserting ṙ from (4.5) and changing the order of integration gives ! +ω ! rout dr 2 dω # . (4.14) Im S = −Im ! 0 rin 1 − 2(Mr−ω ) By the substitutions √ r = u and 2u du = dr, the action can be written as ! ω ! uout 2u2 du * Im S = −Im dω # . (4.15) # u − 2(M − ω ) 0 uin 18 * This integral has a pole at u = 2(M − ω # ). The integral is evaluated by first making u complex and then displacing the pole into the complex plane and deforming the contour around the pole. Since the particle has positive energy, the wave function is on the form ! e−iω t f (r). (4.16) A displacement ω # → ω # − i/ of the energy makes sure that positive energy solutions decay in forward time ! ! ! e−iω t f (r) → e−i(ω −i$)t f (r) = e−iω t e−$t f (r). * Taylor expansion of 2(M − ω # + i/) in / gives * 2(M − ω # + i/) ≈ * 1 2(M − ω # ) + * i/ + ... 2 2(M − ω # ) and by rescaling the second term * * 2(M − ω + i/) ≈ 2(M − ω) + i/ + ... The pole has now been pushed into the upper half complex u-plane ! ω ! uout 2u2 du * Im S = −Im dω # . # u − ( 2(M − ω ) + i/) 0 uin (4.17) (4.18) (4.19) (4.20) By deforming the contour around this pole and using residue calculus, the integral is evaluated to ! ∞ * 2u2 du * = −2πi( 2(M ω # ) + i/)2 ≈ −4πi(M − ω # ). # −∞ u − ( 2(M − ω ) + i/) (4.21) A detailed description of residue calculus can be found in Mathews and Howell [9]. The result in (4.21) gives the action integral ! +ω Im S = +Im 4πi(M − ω # )dω # . (4.22) 0 Solving this last integral gives " ω# . Im S = 4πω M − 2 (4.23) The tunneling rate for a particle outwards through the horizon thus turns out to be " " ω ## Γ ∼ exp −8πω M − . (4.24) 2 19 4.3 Anti-particle Tunneling When the pair is created outside the horizon, the negative energy particle tunnels inwards into the black hole. For negative energy particles, time goes backwards so the time has to be reversed in the equations of motion. A time reversal corresponds to t → −t and the line element with time reversed is + , 2M 2M ds2 = − 1 − dt2 − 2 dtdr + dr2 + r2 dΩ2 . (4.25) r r The radial null geodesics are obtained by + , 2M 2M 2 2 0 = ds = − 1 − dt − 2 dtdr + dr2 , r r which leads to 2 +1 + 2M 2 r ṙ = −1 + 2M r outgoing geodesics ingoing geodesics (4.26) (4.27) The negative energy particle sees a geometry of a fixed black hole mass. Taking self-gravitation into account will in this case replace M by M + ω instead of M − ω. The action for an ingoing particle with negative energy is ! rin ! rin ! M Im S = pr dr = Im dp#r dr. (4.28) rout rout M −ω Using Hamiltons equation dH = ṙ dpr to change variables from momentum to energy gives ! M +ω ! rin dH Im S = dr. M rout ṙ (4.29) (4.30) Changing the variables from H to ω # and inserting ṙ from (4.27) gives for the negative energy particle ! −ω ! rin dr 2 Im S = dω # . (4.31) ! 2(M +ω ) 0 rout −1 + r √ Substituting r = u and dr = 2u du gives ! −ω ! uin 2u2 du * dω # . (4.32) Im S = −Im # 0 uout u − ( 2(M + ω )) 20 In this case the energy must be displaced into the upper complex plane so # # that the negative energy * wave function is decreasing, so ω → ω + i/. By Taylor expansion of 2(M + ω # + i/) * * 1 2(M + ω # + i/) ≈ 2(M + ω # ) + * i/ + ... (4.33) 2 2(M + ω # ) and rescaling the second term gives * * 2(M + ω + i/) ≈ 2(M + ω) + i/ + ... This pole is also pushed into the upper complex u-plane ! −ω ! uin 2u2 du * Im S = −Im dω # . # 0 uout u − ( 2(M + ω ) + i/) (4.34) (4.35) By deforming the contour around the pole and using residue calculus ! −∞ 2u2 du * = 4πi(M + ω). (4.36) # +∞ u − ( 2(M + ω ) + i/) This result gives the action integral ! Im S = −Im −ω 4πi(M + ω # )dω # (4.37) 0 and the imaginary part of the action is " ω# Im S = 4πω M − . (4.38) 2 The tunneling rate of a negative energy particle inwards through the horizon is found to be " " ω ## Γ ∼ exp −8πω M − . (4.39) 2 Both particle and anti-particle tunneling contributes to the tunneling rate, so that their amplitudes should be added. This however, only contributes with a pre-factor and does not change the exponential in (4.39). 5 Discussion The tunneling rate (4.39) obtained in this calculation will reduce to Γ ∼ exp(−8πM ω) if the ω 2 term is neglected. This is a Boltzmann factor for a particle with energy ω at the Hawking temperature T = 1/8πM . The correction term ω 2 arises since the energy conservation was taken into account. This means that when energy conservation is enforced the spectrum of the radiation is not precisely thermal. 21 Acknowledgements I am very grateful to my supervisor, Joseph Minahan, for taking the time and answering my questions. Without his patience and positive attitude I would not have been able to finish this thesis. I also would like to thank Ulf Lindström. 22 References [1] Sean Carroll, Spacetime and Geometry, Addison Wesley, 2004. [2] Michael E. Peskin and Daniel V. Schroeder, An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory, Westview, 1995. [3] B.H. Bransden and C.J. Joachain, Quantum Mechanics, Prentice Hall, 2000. [4] Maulik Parikh and Frank Wilczek, Hawking Radiation as Tunneling, 2001, arXiv:hep-th/9907001. [5] Maulik Parikh, A Secret Tunnel Through The Horizon, 2004, arXiv:hepth/0405160. [6] Maulik Parikh, Energy Conservation and Hawking Radiation, 2004, arXiv:hep-th/0402166. [7] F. Mandl, Statistical Physics, Wiley, 1988. [8] Per Kraus and Frank Wilczek, Self-Interaction Correction to Black Hole Radiance, 1994, arXiv:hep-th/9408003. [9] John H. Mathews and Russell W. Howell, Complex Analysis for Mathematics and Engineering, Jones and Bartlett Publishers, 1997. 23