Effective field theory description of horizon-fluid determines the scrambling time
Swastik Bhattacharya (BITS-Hyderabad), S. Shankaranarayanan (IIT, Bombay)

TL;DR
This paper develops an effective field theory framework for black hole horizon fluids, linking symmetries and perturbations to physical properties like viscosity and scrambling time, offering new insights into black hole information dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a deformed conformal field theory approach to model non-stationary horizon dynamics and connects bulk viscosity to scrambling time, advancing black hole horizon physics.
Findings
Horizon fluid described by a deformed CFT with a massive scalar field.
Bulk viscosity coefficient determines black hole scrambling time.
Matter modes with energy below a threshold thermalize slowly.
Abstract
Black hole horizons interact with external fields when matter-energy falls through them. Such non-stationary black hole horizons can be described using viscous fluid equations. This work attempts to describe this process using effective field theory methods. Such a description can provide important insights beyond classical black hole physics. In this work, we construct a low-energy effective field theory description for the horizon fluid of a 4-dimensional, asymptotically flat, Einstein black hole. The effective field theory of the dynamical horizon has two ingredients: degrees of freedom involved in the interaction with external fields and symmetry. The dual requirements of incorporating near-horizon symmetries ( diffeomorphism) and possessing length scales due to external perturbations is naturally satisfied if the theory on the non-stationary black hole horizon is a…
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.
