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      Black hole formation in a contracting universe

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          Abstract

          We study the evolution of cosmological perturbations in a contracting universe. We aim to determine under which conditions density perturbations grow to form large inhomogeneities and collapse into black holes. Our method consists in solving the cosmological perturbation equations in complete generality for a hydrodynamical fluid. We then describe the evolution of the fluctuations over the different length scales of interest and as a function of the equation of state for the fluid, and we explore two different types of initial conditions: quantum vacuum and thermal fluctuations. We also derive a general requirement for black hole collapse on sub-Hubble scales, and we use the Press-Schechter formalism to describe the black hole formation probability. For a fluid with a small sound speed (e.g., dust), we find that both quantum and thermal initial fluctuations grow in a contracting universe, and the largest inhomogeneities that first collapse into black holes are of Hubble size and the collapse occurs well before reaching the Planck scale. For a radiation-dominated fluid, we find that no black hole can form before reaching the Planck scale. In the context of matter bounce cosmology, it thus appears that only models in which a radiation-dominated era begins early in the cosmological evolution are robust against the formation of black holes. Yet, the formation of black holes might be an interesting feature for other models. We comment on a number of possible alternative early universe scenarios that could take advantage of this feature.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2016-09-08
          2016-09-22
          Article
          1609.02556
          35772d0b-49c8-4336-8d03-f88b65272ae9

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          30 pages, 2 figures; v2: minor typos corrected, references added
          astro-ph.CO gr-qc hep-th

          Cosmology & Extragalactic astrophysics,General relativity & Quantum cosmology,High energy & Particle physics

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