4.7 Article

Overspinning a Kerr black hole: The effect of the self-force

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 91, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.91.104024

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme FP7/ERC [304978]
  2. STFC [PP/E001025/1]
  3. Science and Technology Facilities Council [PP/E001025/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  4. STFC [PP/C505791/1, PP/E001025/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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We study the scenario in which a massive particle is thrown into a rapidly rotating Kerr black hole in an attempt to spin it up beyond its extremal limit, challenging weak cosmic censorship. We work in black-hole perturbation theory, and focus on nonspinning, uncharged particles sent in on equatorial orbits. We first identify the complete parameter-space region in which overspinning occurs when backreaction effects from the particle's self-gravity are ignored. We find, in particular, that overspinning can be achieved only with particles sent in from infinity. Gravitational self-force effects may prevent overspinning by radiating away a sufficient amount of the particle's angular momentum (dissipative effect), and/or by increasing the effective centrifugal repulsion, so that particles with suitable parameters never get captured (conservative effect). We analyze the full effect of the self-force, thereby completing previous studies by Jacobson and Sotiriou (who neglected the self-force) and by Barausse, Cardoso and Khanna (who considered the dissipative effect on a subset of orbits). Our main result is an inequality, involving certain self-force quantities, which describes a necessary and sufficient condition for the overspinning scenario to be overruled. This censorship condition is formulated on a certain one-parameter family of geodesics in the limit of an extremal Kerr geometry. We find that the censorship condition is insensitive to the dissipative effect (within the first-order self-force approximation used here), except for a subset of perfectly fine-tuned orbits, for which a separate censorship condition is derived. We do not obtain here the self-force input needed to evaluate either of our two conditions, but discuss the prospects for producing the necessary data using state-of-the-art numerical codes.

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