Quantum gravitational effects suppress the formation of trapped surfaces
Ram Brustein, A.J.M. Medved, Hagar Meir

TL;DR
Quantum gravitational effects prevent the formation of trapped surfaces during collapse, suggesting black holes may be horizonless and regular objects, challenging classical predictions.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that quantum fluctuations of geometry suppress apparent horizon formation in gravitational collapse.
Findings
Particle production near the horizon remains finite as Planck length vanishes.
Total quantum quanta scale with Bekenstein-Hawking entropy.
Collapse does not produce an actual apparent horizon, avoiding singularity.
Abstract
Classical general relativity predicts that a contracting, spherically symmetric matter system with a large-enough mass will result in the formation of a trapped region whose outer boundary is an apparent horizon where the gravitational redshift diverges. The incompleteness theorems then lead to the conclusion that the outcome of the collapse is the singular geometry of a Schwarzschild black hole. Both analyses rely on solving Einstein's equations, a set of partial differential equations, valid in the limit that the Schwarzschild radius is finite but the Planck length is set to zero, so that quantum fluctuations of the geometry are completely absent. Here, we keep both parameters finite, allowing the geometry to fluctuate quantum mechanically, and take the limit of vanishing Planck length only at the end. Expressing the geometry of a spherically symmetric, collapsing, thin shell of…
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