Black Holes and Sub-millimeter Dimensions
Philip C. Argyres, Savas Dimopoulos, and John March-Russell

TL;DR
This paper explores how black holes behave differently in theories with sub-millimeter extra dimensions, affecting their properties, decay modes, and implications for dark matter and early universe phenomena.
Contribution
It analyzes the altered properties of black holes in models with large extra dimensions and discusses their cosmological and phenomenological implications.
Findings
Black holes are larger, colder, and longer-lived in these theories.
Primordial black hole bounds are relaxed, allowing for new dark matter candidates.
Black holes could seed early galaxy and quasar formation.
Abstract
Recently, a new framework for solving the hierarchy problem was proposed which does not rely on low energy supersymmetry or technicolor. The fundamental Planck mass is at a TeV and the observed weakness of gravity at long distances is due the existence of new sub-millimeter spatial dimensions. In this letter, we study how the properties of black holes are altered in these theories. Small black holes---with Schwarzschild radii smaller than the size of the new spatial dimensions---are quite different. They are bigger, colder, and longer-lived than a usual -dimensional black hole of the same mass. Furthermore, they primarily decay into harmless bulk graviton modes rather than standard-model degrees of freedom. We discuss the interplay of our scenario with the holographic principle. Our results also have implications for the bounds on the spectrum of primordial black holes (PBHs)…
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