How Fluids Bend: the Elastic Expansion for Higher-Dimensional Black Holes
Jay Armas

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive effective theory for higher-dimensional black branes, incorporating elastic and hydrodynamic properties, and extends existing models to include rotation and spin effects, providing new insights into black hole physics.
Contribution
It introduces a general quadratic free energy formulation for stationary fluid branes, coupling elastic and hydrodynamic responses, and relates these to black brane properties and effective actions.
Findings
Characterization of elastic response coefficients for fluid branes
Establishment of a relation between elasticity and stress-energy tensor multipole expansion
Proposal of a second order effective action for stationary blackfolds
Abstract
Hydrodynamics can be consistently formulated on surfaces of arbitrary co-dimension in a background space-time, providing the effective theory describing long-wavelength perturbations of black branes. When the co-dimension is non-zero, the system acquires fluid-elastic properties and constitutes what is called a fluid brane. Applying an effective action approach, the most general form of the free energy quadratic in the extrinsic curvature and extrinsic twist potential of stationary fluid brane configurations is constructed to second order in a derivative expansion. This construction generalizes the Helfrich-Canham bending energy for fluid membranes studied in theoretical biology to the case in which the fluid is rotating. It is found that stationary fluid brane configurations are characterized by a set of 3 elastic response coefficients, 3 hydrodynamic response coefficients and 1 spin…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
