Topological censorship and higher genus black holes

G. J. Galloway, K. Schleich, D. M. Witt, and E. Woolgar
Phys. Rev. D 60, 104039 – Published 27 October 1999
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Abstract

Motivated by recent interest in black holes whose asymptotic geometry approaches that of anti–de Sitter spacetime, we give a proof of topological censorship applicable to spacetimes with such asymptotic behavior. Employing a useful rephrasing of topological censorship as a property of homotopies of arbitrary loops, we then explore the consequences of topological censorship for the horizon topology of black holes. We find that the genera of horizons are controled by the genus of the space at infinity. Our results make it clear that there is no conflict between topological censorship and the nonspherical horizon topologies of locally anti–de Sitter black holes. More specifically, let D be the domain of outer communications of a boundary at infinity “scri.” We show that the principle of topological censorship (PTC), which is that every causal curve in D having end points on scri can be deformed to scri, holds under reasonable conditions for timelike scri, as it is known to do for a simply connected null scri. We then show that the PTC implies that the fundamental group of scri maps, via inclusion, onto the fundamental group of D: i.e., every loop in D is homotopic to a loop in scri. We use this to determine the integral homology of preferred spacelike hypersurfaces (Cauchy surfaces or analogues thereof) in the domain of outer communications of any four-dimensional spacetime obeying the PTC. From this, we establish that the sum of the genera of the cross sections in which such a hypersurface meets black hole horizons is bounded above by the genus of the cut of infinity defined by the hypersurface. Our results generalize familiar theorems valid for asymptotically flat spacetimes requiring simple connectivity of the domain of outer communications and spherical topology for stationary and evolving black holes.

  • Received 22 February 1999

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.60.104039

©1999 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

G. J. Galloway1,*, K. Schleich2,†, D. M. Witt2,‡, and E. Woolgar3,§

  • 1Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida 33124
  • 2Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia, 6224 Agriculture Road, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z1
  • 3Department of Mathematical Sciences and Theoretical Physics Institute, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2G1

  • *Email address: galloway@math.miami.edu
  • Email address: schleich@noether.physics.ubc.ca
  • Email address: donwitt@noether.physics.ubc.ca
  • §Email address: ewoolgar@math.ualberta.ca

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Issue

Vol. 60, Iss. 10 — 15 November 1999

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