Conformally Schwarzschild cosmological black holes
Takuma Sato, Hideki Maeda, Tomohiro Harada

TL;DR
This paper investigates conformally Schwarzschild spacetimes as models for cosmological black holes, analyzing their physical reasonableness and matter content across different coordinate systems, and finds limitations in their physical viability.
Contribution
It compares various conformal Schwarzschild models, clarifies their physical interpretations, and identifies which models can represent cosmological black holes.
Findings
Sultana-Dyer and Culetu spacetimes describe cosmological black holes.
Matter fields in these models violate energy conditions at late times.
Models are unsuitable for describing primordial black hole evolution after horizon entry.
Abstract
We thoroughly investigate conformally Schwarzschild spacetimes in different coordinate systems to seek for physically reasonable models of a cosmological black hole. We assume that a conformal factor depends only on the time coordinate and that the spacetime is asymptotically flat Friedmann-Lema\^{\i}tre-Robertson-Walker universe filled by a perfect fluid obeying a linear equation state with . In this class of spacetimes, the McClure-Dyer spacetime, constructed in terms of the isotropic coordinates, and the Thakurta spacetime, constructed in terms of the standard Schwarzschild coordinates, are identical and do not describe a cosmological black hole. In contrast, the Sultana-Dyer and Culetu classes of spacetimes, constructed in terms of the Kerr-Schild and Painlev\'{e}-Gullstrand coordinates, respectively, describe a cosmological black hole. In the Sultana-Dyer case,…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
