Black Hole Evaporation in an Expanding Universe
Hiromi Saida, Tomohiro Harada, Hideki Maeda

TL;DR
This paper investigates quantum radiation from black holes in an expanding universe, analyzing effects of different mass accretion scenarios and deriving implications for black hole evaporation and temperature.
Contribution
It provides a detailed calculation of black hole radiation power considering cosmological effects and introduces a quasi-equilibrium temperature concept for conformal stationary black holes.
Findings
Negative cosmological correction to radiation power in no accretion case
Radiation power matches Hawking radiation in significant accretion case
Mass accretion dominates over evaporation, reducing energy loss over time
Abstract
We calculate the quantum radiation power of black holes which are asymptotic to the Einstein-de Sitter universe at spatial and null infinities. We consider two limiting mass accretion scenarios, no accretion and significant accretion. We find that the radiation power strongly depends on not only the asymptotic condition but also the mass accretion scenario. For the no accretion case, we consider the Einstein-Straus solution, where a black hole of constant mass resides in the dust Friedmann universe. We find negative cosmological correction besides the expected redshift factor. This is given in terms of the cubic root of ratio in size of the black hole to the cosmological horizon, so that it is currently of order but could have been significant at the formation epoch of primordial black holes. Due to the cosmological effects, this…
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