Gravitational Ionization by Schwarzschild Primordial Black Holes
Alexandra P. Klipfel, David I. Kaiser

TL;DR
This paper explores how primordial black holes could cause ionization and nuclear disruption through gravitational tidal forces, offering potential new observational signatures distinct from Hawking radiation.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of gravitational ionization and nuclear dissociation caused by primordial black holes, expanding detection possibilities beyond Hawking radiation.
Findings
Gravitational ionization could dominate in certain PBH mass ranges.
Deuteron dissociation by gravity surpasses Hawking radiation effects for specific masses.
Gravitational fission of heavy nuclei is a plausible phenomenon induced by PBHs.
Abstract
Primordial black holes (PBHs) are theorized to form from the collapse of overdensities in the very early Universe. PBHs in the asteroid-mass range could serve as all or most of the dark matter today, but are particularly difficult to detect due to their modest rates of Hawking emission and sub-micron Schwarzschild radii. We consider whether the steep gradients of a PBH's gravitational field could generate tidal forces strong enough to disrupt atoms and nuclei. Such phenomena may yield new observables that could uniquely distinguish a PBH from a macroscopic object of the same mass. We first consider the gravitational ionization of ambient neutral hydrogen and evaluate prospects for detecting photon radiation from the recombination of ionized atoms. During the present epoch, this effect would be swamped by Hawking radiation --…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
