Black Hole Horizons and their Mechanics
Abhay Ashtekar

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development and significance of quasi-local horizons in black hole physics, highlighting their advantages over event horizons and their role in understanding black hole dynamics and quantum effects.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of quasi-local horizons, generalizes black hole mechanics laws, and emphasizes their importance in recent theoretical and quantum studies.
Findings
Quasi-local horizons provide a more practical framework than event horizons.
They have led to generalized laws of black hole mechanics.
These horizons are crucial in understanding black hole dynamics and quantum evaporation.
Abstract
Black holes are often characterized by event horizons, following the literature that laid the mathematical foundations of the subject in the 1970s. However black hole event horizons have two fundamental conceptual limitations. First, they are defined only in space-times that admit a future conformal boundary. Second, they are teleological; their formation and growth is not determined by local physics but depends on what could happen in the distant future. Therefore, event horizons have not played much of a role in the recent theoretical advances that were sparked by discoveries of the LIGO-virgo collaborations. This article focuses on quasi-local horizons that have been used instead. Laws governing them -- mechanics of quasi-local horizons -- generalize those that were first found using event horizons. These results, obtained over the last two decades or so, have provided much insight…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
