Near-horizon metric

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Template:Short description The near-horizon metric (NHM) refers to the near-horizon limit of the global metric of a black hole. NHMs play an important role in studying the geometry and topology of black holes, but are only well defined for extremal black holes.[1][2][3] NHMs are expressed in Gaussian null coordinates, and one important property is that the dependence on the coordinate r is fixed in the near-horizon limit.

NHM of extremal Reissner–Nordström black holes

The metric of extremal Reissner–Nordström black hole is

ds2=(1Mr)2dt2+(1Mr)2dr2+r2(dθ2+sin2θdϕ2).

Taking the near-horizon limit

tt~ϵ,rM+ϵr~,ϵ0,

and then omitting the tildes, one obtains the near-horizon metric

ds2=r2M2dt2+M2r2dr2+M2(dθ2+sin2θdϕ2)

NHM of extremal Kerr black holes

The metric of extremal Kerr black hole (M=a=J/M) in Boyer–Lindquist coordinates can be written in the following two enlightening forms,[4][5]

ds2=ρK2ΔKΣ2dt2+ρK2ΔKdr2+ρK2dθ2+Σ2sin2θρK2(dϕωKdt)2,
ds2=ΔKρK2(dtMsin2θdϕ)2+ρK2ΔKdr2+ρK2dθ2+sin2θρK2(Mdt(r2+M2)dϕ)2,

where

ρK2:=r2+M2cos2θ,ΔK:=(rM)2,Σ2:=(r2+M2)2M2ΔKsin2θ,ωK:=2M2rΣ2.

Taking the near-horizon limit[6][7]

tt~ϵ,rM+ϵr~,ϕϕ~+12Mϵt~,ϵ0,

and omitting the tildes, one obtains the near-horizon metric (this is also called extremal Kerr throat[6] )

ds21+cos2θ2(r22M2dt2+2M2r2dr2+2M2dθ2)+4M2sin2θ1+cos2θ(dϕ+rdt2M2)2.

NHM of extremal Kerr–Newman black holes

Extremal Kerr–Newman black holes (r+2=M2+Q2) are described by the metric[4][5]

ds2=(12MrQ2ρKN)dt22asin2θ(2MrQ2)ρKNdtdϕ+ρKN(dr2ΔKN+dθ2)+Σ2ρKNdϕ2,

where

ΔKN:=r22Mr+a2+Q2,ρKN:=r2+a2cos2θ,Σ2:=(r2+a2)2ΔKNa2sin2θ.

Taking the near-horizon transformation

tt~ϵ,rM+ϵr~,ϕϕ~+ar02ϵt~,ϵ0,(r02:=M2+a2)

and omitting the tildes, one obtains the NHM[7]

ds2(1a2r02sin2θ)(r2r02dt2+r02r2dr2+r02dθ2)+r02sin2θ(1a2r02sin2θ)1(dϕ+2arMr04dt)2.

NHMs of generic black holes

In addition to the NHMs of extremal Kerr–Newman family metrics discussed above, all stationary NHMs could be written in the form[1][2][3][8]

ds2=(h^ABGAGBF)r2dv2+2dvdrh^ABGBrdvdyAh^ABGArdvdyB+h^ABdyAdyB
=Fr2dv2+2dvdr+h^AB(dyAGArdv)(dyBGBrdv),

where the metric functions {F,GA} are independent of the coordinate r, h^AB denotes the intrinsic metric of the horizon, and yA are isothermal coordinates on the horizon.

Remark: In Gaussian null coordinates, the black hole horizon corresponds to r=0.

See also

References

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