Infrared Effects and the Unruh State
Paul R. Anderson, Shohreh Gholizadeh Siahmazgi, and Zachary P., Scofield

TL;DR
This paper examines how infrared effects influence the late-time behavior of quantum scalar fields in the Unruh state around two-dimensional black holes, showing that scattering effects can remove divergences and alter mode behavior.
Contribution
It demonstrates how different effective potentials affect infrared divergences and late-time mode behavior in the Unruh state for various black hole spacetimes.
Findings
Infrared divergences are removed by scattering effects in certain potentials.
Modes approach zero at late times when divergences are removed.
Infrared effects depend on the presence and form of the potential.
Abstract
Detailed behaviors of the modes of quantized scalar fields in the Unruh state for various eternal black holes in two dimensions are investigated. It is shown that the late-time behaviors of some of the modes of the quantum fields and of the symmetric two-point function are determined by infrared effects. The nature of these effects depends upon whether there is an effective potential in the mode equation and what form this potential takes. Here, three cases are considered, one with no potential and two with potentials that are nonnegative everywhere and are zero on the event horizon of the black hole and zero at either infinity or the cosmological horizon. Specifically, the potentials are a delta function potential and the potential that occurs for a massive scalar field in Schwarzschild-de Sitter spacetime. In both cases, scattering effects remove infrared divergences in the mode…
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
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Geophysics and Sensor Technology · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
