Hawking Spectrum and High Frequency Dispersion
S. Corley, T. Jacobson

TL;DR
This paper investigates particle spectra in two-dimensional black hole models with Lorentz-violating dispersion, revealing a near-thermal Hawking flux and additional non-thermal scattering effects, with implications for high-frequency behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a model with higher spatial derivatives in a Lorentz non-invariant scalar field, analyzing its impact on Hawking radiation and revealing new non-thermal scattering phenomena.
Findings
Horizon radiation closely matches a thermal spectrum with minimal deviation.
Non-thermal scattering flux can dominate at high frequencies, especially near high-curvature regions.
Oscillatory behavior in flux due to interference effects was observed.
Abstract
We study the spectrum of created particles in two-dimensional black hole geometries for a linear, hermitian scalar field satisfying a Lorentz non-invariant field equation with higher spatial derivative terms that are suppressed by powers of a fundamental momentum scale . The preferred frame is the ``free-fall frame" of the black hole. This model is a variation of Unruh's sonic black hole analogy. We find that there are two qualitatively different types of particle production in this model: a thermal Hawking flux generated by ``mode conversion" at the black hole horizon, and a non-thermal spectrum generated via scattering off the background into negative free-fall frequency modes. This second process has nothing to do with black holes and does not occur for the ordinary wave equation because such modes do not propagate outside the horizon with positive Killing frequency. The horizon…
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