Micro black holes in the laboratory
Marcus Bleicher, Piero Nicolini, Martin Sprenger, Elizabeth Winstanley

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical basis and recent developments in creating and understanding microscopic black holes at the LHC, including their evolution and quantum gravity effects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the theoretical motivation, evolution, and quantum corrections of micro black holes in laboratory conditions.
Findings
Micro black holes could be produced at the LHC under certain theories.
Quantum gravity corrections significantly affect black hole radiation.
Understanding black hole evolution is crucial for potential experimental detection.
Abstract
The possibility of creating microscopic black holes is one of the most exciting predictions for the LHC, with potentially major consequences for our current understanding of physics. We briefly review the theoretical motivation for micro black hole production, and our understanding of their subsequent evolution. Recent work on modelling the radiation from quantum-gravity-corrected black holes is also discussed.
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