Horizon of quantum black holes in various dimensions
Roberto Casadio, Rogerio T. Cavalcanti, Andrea Giugno, Jonas Mureika

TL;DR
This paper extends the horizon wave-function formalism to various dimensions, analyzing the probability of quantum black holes and their properties, revealing dimension-dependent behaviors and implications for black hole production and quantum gravity.
Contribution
It generalizes the horizon wave-function approach to arbitrary dimensions, providing new insights into black hole probabilities and quantum effects across different dimensional frameworks.
Findings
Probability of black holes increases with mass above the Planck scale for D≥3.
Higher dimensions reduce the likelihood of black hole formation at fixed mass.
In D=1, black holes are predominantly quantum with no classical counterpart.
Abstract
We adapt the horizon wave-function formalism to describe massive static spherically symmetric sources in a general -dimensional space-time, for and including the case. We find that the probability that such objects are (quantum) black holes behaves similarly to the probability in the framework for . In fact, for , the probability increases towards unity as the mass grows above the relevant -dimensional Planck scale . At fixed mass, however, decreases with increasing , so that a particle with mass has just about probability to be a black hole in , and smaller for larger . This result has a potentially strong impact on estimates of black hole production in colliders. In contrast, for , we find the probability is comparably larger for smaller masses, but ,…
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