Hawking radiation as perceived by different observers

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Abstract

We study the perception of Hawking radiation by different observers outside a black hole. The analysis is done in terms of an effective-temperature function that varies along the trajectory of each observer. The vacuum state of the radiation field is chosen to be non-stationary, so as to mimic the switching-on of Hawking radiation that would appear in a real black hole collapse. We analyse how this vacuum is perceived by observers staying at a fixed radius, by observers coming in free-fall from radial infinity at different times, and by observers in free-fall released from finite radial positions. Results found have a compelling physical interpretation. One main result, at first unexpected, is that in general free-falling observers do perceive particle emission by the black hole when crossing the event horizon. This happens because of a diverging Doppler shift at the event horizon. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Barbado, L. C., Barceló, C., & Garay, L. J. (2011). Hawking radiation as perceived by different observers. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1458, pp. 363–366). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4734435

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