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Black Holes as Effective Geometries

2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

2 Pith papers citing it
abstract

Gravitational entropy arises in string theory via coarse graining over an underlying space of microstates. In this review we would like to address the question of how the classical black hole geometry itself arises as an effective or approximate description of a pure state, in a closed string theory, which semiclassical observers are unable to distinguish from the "naive" geometry. In cases with enough supersymmetry it has been possible to explicitly construct these microstates in spacetime, and understand how coarse-graining of non-singular, horizon-free objects can lead to an effective description as an extremal black hole. We discuss how these results arise for examples in Type II string theory on AdS_5 x S^5 and on AdS_3 x S^3 x T^4 that preserve 16 and 8 supercharges respectively. For such a picture of black holes as effective geometries to extend to cases with finite horizon area the scale of quantum effects in gravity would have to extend well beyond the vicinity of the singularities in the effective theory. By studying examples in M-theory on AdS_3 x S^2 x CY that preserve 4 supersymmetries we show how this can happen.

citation-role summary

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citation-polarity summary

fields

gr-qc 1 hep-th 1

years

2026 1 2019 1

roles

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polarities

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representative citing papers

Superball of Strings

hep-th · 2026-01-14 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

A random-walk-sized fuzzball of BPS superstrings in supergravity is proposed to describe generic BPS microstates instead of a singular black hole.

citing papers explorer

Showing 2 of 2 citing papers.

  • Superball of Strings hep-th · 2026-01-14 · unverdicted · none · ref 15 · internal anchor

    A random-walk-sized fuzzball of BPS superstrings in supergravity is proposed to describe generic BPS microstates instead of a singular black hole.

  • Testing the nature of dark compact objects: a status report gr-qc · 2019-04-10 · accept · none · ref 269

    Current and future observations can test whether dark compact objects are Kerr black holes or exotic alternatives, with null results strengthening the black hole paradigm.