Seminars 李政道研究所-粒子核物理研究所联合演讲

Not quite black holes: from theory to observation

by Dr Jing Ren (Institute of High Energy Physics)

Asia/Shanghai
Zoom: 624053160 (Online Seminar)

Zoom: 624053160

Online Seminar

Online seminar Meeting room: https://zoom.com.cn/j/624053160 Password: 44847907
Description

Abstract:

Astrophysical black hole candidates might be horizonless ultracompact objects. Of particular interest is the plausible fundamental connection with quantum gravity. The puzzle is then why we shall expect Planck scale corrections around the horizon of a macroscopic black hole. Taking asymptotically free quadratic gravity as a possible candidate of UV completion of general relativity, I will show how the would-be horizon can be naturally replaced by a tiny interior with only Planckian deviation when the matter distribution is sufficiently dense. The new horizonless object may be the nearly black endpoint of gravitational collapse, and it exhibits intriguing thermodynamic behaviors. The implication for phenomenology is rich. For large objects, gravitational wave echoes in the post-merger phase of binary coalescence provide a smoking gun signal for the new physics. The small objects, on the other hand, behave as cold and stable remnants, and they may constitute all of dark matter. A distinctive phenomenon associated with remnant mergers occurs, predicting fluxes of high-energy astrophysical particles due to the spectacular evaporation of the merger product.

Biography:

Jing Ren is currently an associate professor at the Theoretical Physics Division of the Institute of High Energy Physics. Her research interests lie in theoretical particle physics and the interface with gravity, with the main focus of understanding new physics beyond the Standard Model and General Relativity. Prior to joining IHEP in 2018, she was a postdoctoral fellow at University of Toronto in Canada. She received the PhD in Physics (2014) and undergraduate degree (2008) from Tsinghua University.