Black holes and asymptotically safe gravity
Kevin Falls, Daniel F. Litim, Aarti Raghuraman

TL;DR
This paper investigates quantum gravitational effects on black holes within asymptotically safe gravity, revealing smaller horizons, Planck-scale remnants, and modified production cross sections at high energies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of black hole properties in asymptotically safe gravity, including horizon size, singularity absence, and collider implications, extending previous classical models.
Findings
Event horizon decreases with weakening gravity.
Existence of Planck-size black hole remnants with zero temperature.
Production cross sections show a threshold and are suppressed near the Planck scale.
Abstract
Quantum gravitational corrections to black holes are studied in four and higher dimensions using a renormalisation group improvement of the metric. The quantum effects are worked out in detail for asymptotically safe gravity, where the short distance physics is characterized by a non-trivial fixed point of the gravitational coupling. We find that a weakening of gravity implies a decrease of the event horizon, and the existence of a Planck-size black hole remnant with vanishing temperature and vanishing heat capacity. The absence of curvature singularities is generic and discussed together with the conformal structure and the Penrose diagram of asymptotically safe black holes. The production cross section of mini-black holes in energetic particle collisions, such as those at the Large Hadron Collider, is analysed within low-scale quantum gravity models. Quantum gravity corrections imply…
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