Primordial black holes in a dimensionally oxidizing Universe
Konstantinos F. Dialektopoulos, Piero Nicolini, Athanasios G. Tzikas

TL;DR
This paper explores how primordial black holes could have formed during a universe that transitioned from lower to higher dimensions, using quantum gravity and instanton methods to estimate creation rates.
Contribution
It introduces a model of dimensional evolution ('oxidation') and calculates black hole pair creation rates across different dimensions, linking to non-Einstein gravity theories.
Findings
Black hole creation rates depend on the dimensional phase of the universe.
In certain modified gravity theories, the pair creation rate can be unsuppressed.
The model constrains parameters of non-Einstein theories via black hole production rates.
Abstract
The spontaneous creation of primordial black holes in a violently expanding Universe is a well studied phenomenon. Based on quantum gravity arguments, it has been conjectured that the early Universe might have undergone a lower dimensional phase before relaxing to the current dimensional state. In this article we combine the above phenomena: we calculate the pair creation rates of black holes nucleated in an expanding Universe, by assuming a dimensional evolution, we term ``oxidation'', from to and finally to dimensions. Our investigation is based on the no boundary proposal that allows for the construction of the required gravitational instantons. If, on the one hand, the existence of a dilaton non-minimally coupled to the metric is necessary for black holes to exist in the phase, it becomes, on the other hand, trivial in …
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