Black-hole evolution in the presence of scalar fields
I will present recent analytical results on the evolution of the trapping horizon of a spherically symmetric black hole, as due to the
I will present recent analytical results on the evolution of the trapping horizon of a spherically symmetric black hole, as due to the
A call for a 5-months research grant in Strong Gravity for M.Sc.
Fuzzball Shadows: Emergent Horizons from Microstructure
Fabio Bacchini, Daniel R. Mayerson, Bart Ripperda, Jordy Davelaar, Héctor Olivares, Thomas Hertog and Bert Vercnocke
arXiv:2103.12075 [hep-th]
American Physical Society invited the authors of the paper "Exotic Compact Objects and the fate of the light ring instability" to participate in the APS Journal Club (JC), dedicated to selected papers published in Physical Review Letters. It was the first time this JC was dedicated to a gravity paper. The video recording of the session will be found in the JC webpage.
The discussion will focus on the following papers:
"Nonlinear effects in black hole ringdown", by Mark Ho-Yeuk Cheung, et al [arXiv:2208.07374 ];
Our group organized the "State of the art techniques in Strong Gravity" Meeting, in São Pedro do Sul 26-28 April 2023 as a retreat type meeting to exchange ideas. The inspiring discussions will certainly foster new research!
Gr@v Ph.D. student E. Costa presented a seminar on the "Proca-Higgs model" in the Mini-Workshop "New Horizons for Horizonless Physics" at the Galileo Galilei Institute in Florence, Italy.
C. Herdeiro presented an invited colloquium at the U. Tubingen. Thank you to D. Doneva and the whole group for the warm and scientifically stimulating hospitality!
On April 12th, Gr@v member Pedro Cunha gave an invited seminar to the Physics Department of the University of Coimbra, within the ongoing series "coffee with physics". The seminar, entitled "The fate of the light-ring instability", focused on a recent publication.
Carlos and Eugen visited the birthplace of Einstein: "Here stood the house where Albert Einstein came to the world on March 14 1879." The building was destroyed in a WWII bombing in December 1944.