Information retrieval from black holes
Kinjalk Lochan, Sumanta Chakraborty, T. Padmanabhan

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method for extracting complete information about the initial state of matter from non-thermal distortions in Hawking radiation, suggesting a way to resolve the black hole information paradox.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of non-vacuum distortions in Hawking radiation as a means to fully reconstruct the initial data of the black hole.
Findings
Non-vacuum distortions encode all information about the initial state.
Asymptotic observers can operationally reconstruct initial data from late-time measurements.
The method applies within a 1+1 dimensional CGHS model, tracking information during evaporation.
Abstract
It is generally believed that, when matter collapses to form a black hole, the complete information about the initial state of the matter cannot be retrieved by future asymptotic observers, through local measurements. This is contrary to the expectation from a unitary evolution in quantum theory and leads to (a version of) the black hole information paradox. Classically, nothing else, apart from mass, charge and angular momentum is expected to be revealed to such asymptotic observers after the formation of a black hole. Semi-classically, black holes evaporate after their formation through the Hawking radiation. The dominant part of the radiation is expected to be thermal and hence one cannot know anything about the initial data from the resultant radiation. However, there can be sources of distortions which make the radiation non-thermal. Although the distortions are not strong enough…
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