Quasinormal modes of AdS black holes and the approach to thermal equilibrium
Top Cited Papers
- 27 June 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 62 (2), 024027
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.62.024027
Abstract
We investigate the decay of a scalar field outside a Schwarzschild anti–de Sitter black hole. This is determined by computing the complex frequencies associated with quasinormal modes. There are qualitative differences from the asymptotically flat case, even in the limit of small black holes. In particular, for a given angular dependence, the decay is always exponential—there are no power law tails at late times. In terms of the AdS-CFT correspondence, a large black hole corresponds to an approximately thermal state in the field theory, and the decay of the scalar field corresponds to the decay of a perturbation of this state. Thus one obtains the time scale for the approach to thermal equilibrium. We compute these time scales for the strongly coupled field theories in three, four, and six dimensions, which are dual to string theory in asymptotically AdS spacetimes.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- ON THE ROLE OF CHAOS IN THE AdS/CFT CONNECTIONModern Physics Letters A, 1999
- Large N field theories, string theory and gravityPhysics Reports, 1999
- Radiative falloff in Schwarzschild–de Sitter spacetimePhysical Review D, 1999
- Gauge theory correlators from non-critical string theoryPhysics Letters B, 1998
- Anti de Sitter space and holographyAdvances in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics, 1998
- The large $N$ limit of superconformal field theories and supergravityAdvances in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics, 1998
- Scalar wave falloff in asymptotically anti–de Sitter backgroundsPhysical Review D, 1997
- Telling tails in the presence of a cosmological constantPhysical Review D, 1997
- Long Wave Trains of Gravitational Waves from a Vibrating Black HoleThe Astrophysical Journal, 1971
- Stability of the Schwarzschild MetricPhysical Review D, 1970