Collapsing shells of radiation in anti–de Sitter spacetimes and the hoop and cosmic censorship conjectures
- 25 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 59 (4) , 044020
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.59.044020
Abstract
Gravitational collapse of radiation in an anti–de Sitter background is studied. For the spherical case, the collapse proceeds in much the same way as in the Minkowski background, i.e., massless naked singularities may form for a highly inhomogeneous collapse, violating the cosmic censorship, but not the hoop conjecture. The toroidal, cylindrical and planar collapses can be treated together. In these cases no naked singularity ever forms, in accordance with the cosmic censorship. However, since the collapse proceeds to form toroidal, cylindrical or planar black holes, the hoop conjecture in an anti–de Sitter spacetime is violated.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rotation halts cylindrical, relativistic gravitational collapsePhysical Review D, 1992
- Precursory singularities in spherical gravitational collapsePhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Naked singularities: Gravitationally collapsing configurations of dust or radiation in spherical symmetry, a unified treatmentPhysical Review Letters, 1992
- On the nature of naked singularities in Vaidya spacetimes: IIClassical and Quantum Gravity, 1991
- Formation of naked singularities: The violation of cosmic censorshipPhysical Review Letters, 1991
- Naked singularities in gravitational collapse which is not self-similarPhysical Review D, 1991
- Naked singularities in self-similar spherical gravitational collapsePhysical Review Letters, 1987
- Violation of cosmic censorship in the gravitational collapse of a dust cloudCommunications in Mathematical Physics, 1984
- Creation of particles by shell-focusing singularitiesPhysical Review D, 1982
- Time functions in numerical relativity: Marginally bound dust collapsePhysical Review D, 1979