On the nature of the black hole information problem
Thiago T. Bergamaschi

TL;DR
This paper reviews the black hole information problem by examining classical and quantum aspects of black holes, discussing assumptions, and exploring potential resolutions to the apparent information loss during black hole evaporation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the assumptions and hypotheses underlying the black hole information problem, integrating classical, quantum, and semiclassical perspectives.
Findings
Black hole formation and evaporation imply information loss under semiclassical assumptions.
Entanglement in quantum field theory is intrinsic and relates to information loss.
The paper discusses potential resolutions to the information paradox beyond semiclassical theory.
Abstract
The aim of this work is to present the black hole information problem and discuss the assumptions and hypotheses necessary for its formulation. As the problem arises in the framework of semiclassical gravity, we first review the necessary notions to describe Lorentzian manifolds equipped with physical properties, as well as the physical concepts of the theory that describes the gravitational interaction as the curvature of spacetime, general relativity. From its classical perspective, we develop the formalism to study the dynamical aspects of black holes in spacetimes obeying suitable causality conditions. Equipped with conjectures that nature censors naked singularities and that black holes reach a stationary configuration after they form, the black hole uniqueness theorems allow us to review several relations for the geometrical quantities associated with them. Following…
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