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Aug 26 – 30, 2024
University of Chicago
America/Chicago timezone

Corrections to Hawking radiation from asteroid-mass primordial black holes: description of the stochastic charge effect in quantum electrodynamics

Aug 27, 2024, 4:15 PM
15m
301 (GCIS)

301

GCIS

Gordon Center for Integrative Science (W301): 929 E 57th St, Chicago, IL 60637

Speaker

Gabriel Vasquez (The Ohio State University)

Description

Hawking radiation sets stringent constraints on Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) as a dark matter candidate in the $M \sim 10^{16} \ \mathrm{g}$ regime based on the evaporation products such as photons, electrons, and positrons. This motivates the need for rigorous modeling of the Hawking emission spectrum. Using semi-classical arguments, Page [Phys. Rev. D 16, 2402 (1977)] showed that the emission of electrons and positrons is altered due to the black hole acquiring an equal and opposite charge to the emitted particle. The Poisson fluctuations of emitted particles cause the charge $Z|e|$ to random walk, but since the acquisition of charge increases the probability of the black hole emitting another charged particle of the same sign, the walk is biased toward $Z=0$, and approaches an equilibrium probability distribution with finite variance $\langle Z^2\rangle$. In this talk, we explore how this ''stochastic charge'' phenomenon arises from quantum electrodynamics (QED) on a Schwarzchild spacetime. We prove that (except for a small Fermi blocking term) the semi-classical variance $\langle Z^2 \rangle$ agrees with the variance of a quantum operator $\langle \hat{\cal Z}^2 \rangle$, where $\hat{\cal Z}$ may be thought of as an ''atomic number'' that includes the black hole as well as charge near it (weighted by a factor of $2M/r$). In QED, the flucutations in $\hat{\cal Z}$ do not arise from the black hole itself (whose charge remains fixed), but rather as a collective effect in the Hawking-emitted particles mediated by the long-range electromagnetic interaction. We find the rms charge $\langle Z^2\rangle^{1/2}$ asymptotes to 3.44 at small PBH masses $M\lesssim 2\times 10^{16}\,$g, declining to 2.42 at $M=5.2\times 10^{17}\,$g.

Primary author

Gabriel Vasquez (The Ohio State University)

Co-authors

John Kushan (The Ohio State University) Makana Silva (Los Alamos National Laboratory) Emily Koivu (The Ohio State University) Arijit Das (The Ohio State University) Dr Christopher Hirata (The Ohio State University)

Presentation materials