JID:PLB AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.1 (1-11)
Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
1
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
2
66 67
3
Physics Letters B
4 5
68 69 70
6
71
www.elsevier.com/locate/physletb
7
72
8
73
9
74
10
75
11 12 13
AdS and Lifshitz black hole solutions in conformal gravity sourced with a scalar field
14 15 16 17
80
Departamento de Física y Astronomía, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de La Serena, Avenida Cisternas 1200, La Serena, Chile
82
81 83 84
a r t i c l e
i n f o
a b s t r a c t
85
21 23 24 25 26
78
Felipe Herrera, Yerko Vásquez
19
22
77 79
18 20
76
86
Article history: Received 10 February 2018 Received in revised form 16 May 2018 Accepted 18 May 2018 Available online xxxx Editor: N. Lambert
27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
In this paper we obtain exact asymptotically anti-de Sitter black hole solutions and asymptotically Lifshitz black hole solutions with dynamical exponents z = 0 and z = 4 of four-dimensional conformal gravity coupled with a self-interacting conformally invariant scalar field. Then, we compute their thermodynamical quantities, such as the mass, the Wald entropy and the Hawking temperature. The mass expression is obtained by using the generalized off-shell Noether potential formulation. It is found that the anti-de Sitter black holes as well as the Lifshitz black holes with z = 0 have zero mass and zero entropy, although they have non-zero temperature. A similar behavior has been observed in previous works, where the integration constant is not associated with a conserved charge, and it can be interpreted as a kind of gravitational hair. On the other hand, the Lifshitz black holes with dynamical exponent z = 4 have non-zero conserved charges, and the first law of black hole thermodynamics holds. Also, we analyze the horizon thermodynamics for the Lifshitz black holes with z = 4, and we show that the first law of black hole thermodynamics arises from the field equations evaluated on the horizon. Furthermore, we study the propagation of a conformally coupled scalar field on these backgrounds and we find the quasinormal modes analytically in several cases. We find that for anti-de Sitter black holes and Lifshitz black holes with z = 4, there is a continuous spectrum of frequencies for Dirichlet boundary condition; however, we show that discrete sets of well defined quasinormal frequencies can be obtained by considering Neumann boundary conditions. © 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Funded by SCOAP3 .
87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103
39
104
40
105
41
106
42
1. Introduction
43 44 45 46 47 48
An interesting class of space–times that have received considerable attention from the point of view of condensed matter physics are the Lifshitz space–times, which are described by the metrics [1]
49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58
ds2 = −
r
2z
dt 2 + 2z
r
2
dr 2 + 2
r
2
dx2 , 2
where x represents a D − 2 dimensional spatial vector, with D corresponding to the space–time dimension and denoting the length scale in this geometry. These geometries are characterized by the parameter z known as the dynamical or critical exponent. For z = 1 this space–time is the usual anti-de Sitter (AdS) metric in Poincaré coordinates with the AdS radius . According to the AdS/CFT correspondence [2] and its generalizations beyond high energy physics,
59 60 61 62 63 64 65
(1.1)
E-mail addresses:
[email protected] (F. Herrera),
[email protected] (Y. Vásquez).
these metrics are important in the search for gravity duals of systems that appear in condensed matter physics and in quantum chromodynamics [1,3]. There are many theories of interest when studying such critical points, such theories exhibit the anisotropic scale invariance t → λz t, x → λx, where the dynamical exponent z accounts for the different scale transformation between the temporal and spatial coordinates, and they are of particular interest in studies of critical exponent theory and phase transitions. The Lifshitz space–time exhibits these symmetries along with the scaling of the radial coordinate r → λ−1 r. On the other hand, gravity duals of field theories with an anisotropic scale invariance at a finite temperature are represented by black hole geometries whose asymptotic behavior is given by (1.1), known as asymptotically Lifshitz black holes. Several Lifshitz black hole metrics have been found, which are solutions of Einstein gravity with several matter fields and also of gravity theories in vacuum with higher curvature corrections, such as f ( R ), Lovelock, New Massive Gravity and others (see for instance [4–13]). Asymptotically Lifshitz black holes can also emerge in Conformal Weyl Gravity in four dimensions with dynamical exponents
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physletb.2018.05.051 0370-2693/© 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Funded by SCOAP3 .
107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130
JID:PLB
AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
1 2 3 4
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.2 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
2
z = 0 and z = 4 [14]. Conformal Gravity (CG) in four dimensions is a higher derivative theory of gravity, whose action is given by the square of the Weyl tensor, and it is invariant under conformal transformations of the metric tensor:
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65
2
g μν (x) → (x) g μν (x) ,
(1.2)
where the conformal factor is a function of the coordinates. A consequence of this is that CG is sensitive to angles but not to distances. CG is naturally subject to conformal anomaly, and renormalizability requires the inclusion of Ricci squared terms. On the other hand, Einstein gravity in four dimensions is two-loop divergent [17], and is perturbatively renormalizable when extended by the inclusion of curvature squared terms in the Lagrangian [15, 16]; moreover, in contrast to Einstein gravity, CG contains ghostlike degrees of freedom in the form of massive spin-2 excitations, which implies vacuum instability. However, Einstein gravity with a cosmological constant is equivalent, at the tree level, to four-dimensional CG with Neumann boundary conditions [18]. The equivalence of the two theories, CG and Einstein gravity, was also studied in [19], both at the level of the action and at the variation of it. Furthermore, an important characteristic is that any space– time conformal to an Einstein manifold is a solution of CG and, because the equations of motion of CG contain fourth order derivatives, there are other solutions to CG than just Einstein gravity. Another connection between both theories is that the renormalized action of four-dimensional Einstein gravity in asymptotically hyperbolic Einstein spaces is on-shell equivalent to the action of CG [20]. The most general spherically symmetric asymptotically AdS solution of four-dimensional CG minimally coupled with an electromagnetic field is static and was obtained in [21]. Moreover, it has been argued that CG may be able to explain the galactic rotation curves without the assumption of dark matter [22]. Further black hole solutions to the field equations of four-dimensional CG in vacuum and in the presence of a Maxwell field include the general Kerr–NUT–AdS-like solution [23], charged and rotating AdS black holes [24], cylindrical black hole solutions [25], and also black hole solutions with both Abelian electromagnetic and SU (2) Yang–Mills fields were obtained in [26]. Another consequence of the invariance of CG under the transformation (1.2) is that the gravitational field equations of CG, which in four space–time dimensions are given by the vanishing of the Bach tensor, imply that the trace of the energy-momentum tensor of the matter sources must vanish. This is because the Bach tensor is traceless; therefore, among the matter sources which can be coupled to CG, one must consider conformally invariant fields such as a minimally coupled electromagnetic field, SU(2) Yang–Mills fields, or a conformally invariant scalar field. It is worth stressing that only a few solutions to CG with a conformally coupled scalar field have been obtained in the literature. Among them, we can mention boson stars with a self-interacting complex scalar field [27] and a C-metric with a conformally coupled scalar field [28]. On the other hand, conformally invariant theories of gravity also exist in other space–time dimensions. In three space–time dimensions the equations of motion of CG contain third derivatives of the metric, and some black hole solutions have been studied in [29–31]. Additionally, threedimensional Lifshitz black holes with z = 0 were obtained in [32]. In six space–time dimensions, AdS and Lifshitz black hole solutions of CG in vacuum and also coupled to conformal matter were obtained in [33]. According to the AdS/CFT correspondence, the search for black hole solutions to theories of gravity coupled with scalar fields and electromagnetic fields is an important task in the studies of holographic superconductors [34], which is dual to a system consisting of a black hole with a scalar field minimally coupled to gravity,
which below a critical temperature condenses outside the black hole horizon. The dual description of a superconductor also works for scalar fields non-minimally coupled to gravity [35]. Further, Lifshitz holographic superconductivity has been the topic of numerous studies with interesting properties when the duality principle is generalized to non-relativistic systems [3,36]. In addition to the recent applications of the gauge/gravity duality to condense matter phenomena like superconductivity, the behavior of scalar fields outside black holes has been extensively studied over the years, mainly in connection with the no-hair theorems (for a review on this topic see [37–39]). The basic physical requirement of a black hole with scalar hair is the scalar field must be regular on the horizon and fall off sufficiently rapidly at infinity. From the above discussion, we conclude that it is important to understand the behavior of matter fields all the way from the black hole horizon to asymptotic infinity. An important characteristic of black holes is their proper (quasinormal) oscillations. The quasinormal modes (QNMs) have a long history [40–45], and nowadays are of great interest due to the observation of gravitational waves from the merger of two black holes [46]. The QNMs give information about the stability of the black holes and also of probe matter fields that evolve perturbatively in the exterior region of black holes, without backreaction on the metric. Also, the QNMs are important in the context of the gravity/gauge duality, because they give information about the relaxation times of thermal states in the boundary theory [47], where the relaxation time is proportional to the inverse of the smallest imaginary part of the quasinormal frequencies (QNFs). On the other hand, in the context of black hole thermodynamics, the quantum area spectrum [48] as well as the mass and entropy spectrum can be determined through the knowledge of the QNMs [49–51]. The QNMs for asymptotically Lifshitz black holes have been studied for different types of perturbations. The QNMs for scalar field perturbations on the background of Lifshiftz black holes have been analyzed in [32,52–62], and generally the scalar modes are stable. Also, the propagation of fermionic perturbations and the QNMs of Lifshitz black holes were studied in Refs. [52,63–65]. The electromagnetic QNMs were investigated in [66]. Furthermore, the QNMs of Lifshitz black holes with hyperscaling violation have been considered in Refs. [67–69]. The aim of this paper is to find asymptotically AdS black hole solutions and asymptotically Lifshitz black hole solutions to a gravitational system, which for simplicity consists only of a real scalar field conformally coupled to CG in four dimensions, which is an important issue due to their potential applications in the description of dual field theories at a finite temperature through the gauge/gravity duality to condense matter phenomena. We require the scalar field to be regular on the horizon and to fall off at spatial infinity. We also assume spherical symmetry of the system. Then, the thermodynamical properties of the solutions are studied, such as their mass, entropy and temperature and it is verified if the first law holds. Furthermore, we study the propagation of a conformally coupled test scalar field in the black hole solutions found and determine the QNMs analytically in several cases. Remarkably, such as in the free source case, we find that there are analytical AdS black hole and Lifshitz black hole solutions with dynamical exponents z = 0 and z = 4. On the other hand, calculating conserved charges of Lifshitz black holes is a difficult task; however, progress was made on the computation of the mass and the related thermodynamics quantities by using the Abbott–Deser–Tekin (ADT) method [70,71] and its off-shell generalization [72,73], as well as the Euclidean action approach [54,74]. In order to calculate the conserved charges, we employ the generalized ADT formalism proposed in [75], which corresponds to the off-shell generalization of the on-shell Noether potential of the ADT formalism [76,77]. We
66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130
JID:PLB AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.3 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
derive an expression for the contribution of the scalar field to the Noether potential, and we show that the method gives consistent results for the conserved quantities for the Lifshitz black holes in CG in the presence of a conformally invariant scalar field, which satisfy the first law of thermodynamics. On the other hand, the entropy is computed using Wald’s formula [78]. The paper is organized as follows: In section 2 we study analytical AdS black holes and Lifshitz black holes to CG with a conformally invariant scalar field. In Section 3 we study the thermodynamical properties: we compute the Wald entropy, the Hawking temperature and the mass of the solutions; in addition, we study the horizon thermodynamics of the Lifshitz black holes with z = 4. We conclude with final remarks in Section 4.
14 15
2. AdS and Lifshitz black hole solutions
16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
In this section we present AdS black hole solutions and Lifshitz black hole solutions of CG with a self-interacting conformally coupled scalar field. The Lifshitz black holes are characterized by dynamical exponents z = 0 and z = 4, while the AdS black holes correspond to the case z = 1. The action of CG with a conformallyinvariant scalar field is given by
d4 x − g
I=
26
−
27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42
1 2α
B μν
≡ 2∇ ρ ∇ σ C
51
+
54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65
(2.1)
(2.2)
1 6
1 2
φ(r ) =
φ0
g μν ∇α ∇ α − ∇μ ∇ν + G μν φ 2 ,
(2.3)
∇α ∇ α φ − 4ν φ 3 −
R 6
φ = 0.
ds = −
r 2z
(2.4)
2 f (r )dt + 2 dr 2 + r 2 dk2 , r f (r ) 2
(2.5)
where
⎧ ⎨ dθ 2 + sin2 θ dφ 2 dk = dθ 2 + dφ 2 ⎩ 2 dθ + sinh2 θ dφ
k=1 k=0 k = −1
68 69
r
71
(2.7)
,
74
f (r ) = 1 +
2 (k + 12ν φ02 ) 4r 2
(2.8)
,
where φ0 is an integration constant, and the parameters must satisfy the condition φ02 (k + 6ν φ02 )(α + 96ν ) = 0. Notice that in the case k + 6ν φ02 = 0, the single integration constant is fixed to φ02 = −k/(6ν ). In what follows we will focus our attention to the case α + 96ν = 0. When k + 12ν φ02 < 0 there is an event
horizon located at r+ = 12 −2 (k + 12ν φ02 ). • Solution with dynamical exponent z = 1, which corresponds to asymptotically AdS black holes:
φ(r ) =
φ0 r
73
(2.9) A r
+
(k + 12ν
φ02 )
r2
76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86
, 2
75
87 88 89
(2.10)
,
90 91
where A and φ0 are integration constants, and the parameters must satisfy the condition φ02 (k + 6ν φ02 )(α + 96ν ) = 0.
92
An
94
A2
event
horizon
− 42 (k
+ 12ν
φ02 )
can
be
located
at
1 2
−A +
for some conditions on the parame-
ters. For A ≥ 0, then 4 (k + 12ν < 0 is required for the existence of the event horizon, while for A < 0, it is required A 2 > 42 (k + 12ν φ02 ). As before, in the case k + 6ν φ02 = 0 the integration constant φ0 is fixed to φ02 = −k/(6ν ). In what follows we will focus our attention to the case α + 96ν = 0. • Solution with dynamical exponent z = 4:
φ02 )
2
φ(r ) =
φ0 r3
93 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103
(2.11)
, k 2
ν 2 φ02
104 105
(2.12)
106
where φ0 is an integration constant. The analytical expression for the event horizon is more complicated for this metric, and we will not show it.
108
4r 2
+
2r 6
,
107 109 110 111
Now, in order to solve the field equations, we will consider the following ansatz for the Lifshitz black hole metric 2
67
72
f (r ) = 1 +
∇α φ∇ α φ + ν φ 4
66
70
• Solution with null dynamical exponent z = 0:
and the Klein–Gordon equation reads
52 53
2
T μν = ∂μ φ∂ν φ − g μν
47
50
,
where B μν is the Bach tensor and the energy-momentum tensor is given by
45
49
α ρσ μρσ ν + R C μρσ ν = − T μν ,
we will consider a scalar field regular outside and on the event horizon which only depends on the radial coordinate φ = φ(r ). We obtain analytical solutions for z = 0, z = 1 and z = 4, which are given by:
f (r ) = 1 +
where C μνρσ is the Weyl tensor, which is the totally traceless part of the Riemann tensor, R is the Ricci scalar, φ is the scalar field, α is a dimensionless gravitational coupling constant and ν is the dimensionless coupling constant of the potential φ 4 . Varying the action with respect to the metric and with respect to the scalar field, the following field equations are obtained:
44
48
C μνρσ C μνρσ
1 μν 1 2 φ R + νφ4 g ∇μ φ∇ν φ + 2 12
43
46
√
3
As final comment, the curvature invariants R, R μν R μν and R μνρσ R μνρσ of the solutions presented here are all regular outside
and on the event horizon and they are singular at r = 0. However, it is worth pointing out that the curvature scalars, such as the Kretschmann scalar R μνρσ R μνρσ , which are invariant under general coordinate transformations, are not invariant under conformal transformations of the metric tensor. Therefore, the conformal invariance can solve the problem of space–time singularities [79]. In [80], suitable conformal factors were found that make the solution conformally equivalent to the Schwarzschild solution regular everywhere.
113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123
(2.6)
and where k parameterizes the curvature of the spatial transverse section; thus, with this ansatz we permit the possibility of black holes with spherical, flat and hyperbolic event horizons. Also, in order to the metric (2.5) tends asymptotically to the Lifshitz space– time, it is required that f (r ) → 1 when r → ∞. On the other hand,
112
3. Thermodynamics
124 125
In this section we will determine the thermodynamical properties of the black hole solutions presented in the previous section, such as the mass, the Wald entropy and the Hawking temperature, and we will show that they satisfy the first law of black hole thermodynamics.
126 127 128 129 130
JID:PLB
AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
1
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.4 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
4
3.1. Entropy and temperature
3.2. Conserved charges
66
2 3 4 5
67
In this section we shall compute the Wald entropy to the black hole solutions, which is given by
6 7
S = −2π
8
∂L
ˆμν ˆρσ hdθ dφ ,
∂ R μνρσ
√
(3.1)
9 10 11 12
where ˆμν is the binormal vector to the bifurcation surface and it is normalized to ˆμν ˆ μν = −2, h is the metric determinant on the surface and
13 14 15
P μνρσ ≡
∂L
1 1 = C μνρσ − φ 2 ( g μρ g νσ − g μσ g νρ ) . ∂ R μνρσ α 24 (3.2)
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
On the other hand, the Hawking temperature of the Lifshitz black holes can be found by evaluating the surface gravity κ , which is defined by κ 2 = − 12 (∇μ χν )(∇ μ χ ν ), where χ is the time-like Killing vector χ ν = (1, 0, 0, 0); thus, for the metric (2.5) we obtain
κ=
23 24 25
T=
r+ 1+z
1 2
r + 1 + z 4π
30
2 S = −8π r+
33 34 35
(3.3)
.
by
29
32
+)
=
φ02 6
24r+
+
4
ωk
α 2
2π r+ (α − 48ν ) 2
3αν 2
+
kπ
ωk ,
6ν
38 39
(3.4)
where ωk denotes the volume of dk . In this case, the positivity of the entropy requires that α < 0. On the other hand, the Hawking temperature of the Lifshitz black holes with z = 4 is given by
40 41 42
T=
43 44 45 46
2 r+
4π 3
S =−
49 50 51 52 53 54 55
T=
58 59 60 61
(3.6)
T=
1 2π
1 4π
d x
− g Eμν δ g μν + E(φ) δφ + ∇μ μ ( g ; δ g ) ,
L
−g
(3.7)
,
r+
2
−
k + 12ν r+
φ02
(3.9)
μ
(3.10)
1 μ αβ 1 μ ξ E hα β + E ν ξ ν h , (3.11) 2 2
where hμν denotes the variation of the background metric
(3.12)
√ 1 √ μν − g Q A D T = δ( − g K μν ) − − g ξ [μ ν ] ( g ; δ g ) . 2
74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 97 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106
109 110 111 112 113 114 116 117 118 119 120
d2 xμν
√
121
μν
− g Q A D T ( g ; s)
122 123
0
d2 xμν Kˆ μν − 2
1
ds
124
√
− gd2 xμν ξ [μ ν ] ( g ; s) , (3.14)
(3.8)
125 126 127
0
.
73
115
(3.13)
Using this Noether potential, one can define the quasi-local conserved charge by
=
72
107
and the indices are raised an lowered with the background metric μν g μν or g μν , and h = g μν hμν . The off-shell ADT potential Q A D T μ μν is defined by J A D T = ∇ν Q A D T . A very important relation between the off-shell Noether potential and the ADT potential is:
71
108
hμν = δ g μν ,
ds
70
98
J A D T = δ E μν ξν + E μα hαν ξ ν −
Q(ξ ) = 2
69
96
ξ μ + 2E μν ξν − μ (Lξ g , Lξ φ) ,
where Lξ denotes the Lie derivative with respect to the vector field ξ . From this current an off-shell Noether potential K μν can be defined by J μ = ∇ν K μν . On the other hand, an off-shell Noether current can be defined as [87]
√
68
86
where Eμν = 0 and E(φ) = 0 denotes the equations of motion (EOM) for the metric and for the scalar field, respectively, and μ ( g ; δ g ) is a surface term. By equating a variation induced by a diffeomorphism generated by a smooth vector field ξ with the generic variation, an off-shell conserved current can be obtained [85,86]
1
notice that the same temperature is obtained for the Lifshitz black hole with z = 0 in three-dimensional conformal gravity [63], while the temperature of the AdS black holes is found to be
63 65
(3.5)
πωk (α + 96ν )φ02 = 0, 3α
62 64
+k .
where, by imposing the condition α + 96ν = 0, it gives a null entropy. In the next section, we will show that these solutions also have zero mass, and therefore the first law of black hole thermodynamics is trivially satisfied. The Hawking temperature of the Lifshitz black holes with z = 0 is given by
56 57
2
For the AdS black holes and the Lifshitz black holes with z = 0, the following expression for the Wald entropy is obtained
47 48
2 6r+
√
4
J μ(g; ξ ) = √
36 37
δI =
The Wald entropy of the Lifshitz black holes with z = 4 is given
27
31
f (r
26 28
f (r+ ) and
In order to compute the conserved charges we shall employ the generalized ADT formalism proposed in [75], which corresponds to the off-shell generalization of the on-shell Noether potential of the ADT formalism [76,77]. Also, this formalism was implemented with a one parameter path in the solution space, such as in [81,82]. See also the Refs. [83,84] where the off-shell Noether current was constructed using the variation of the Bianchi identity. In those references the method was applied to compute the mass of some black hole solutions in conformal Weyl gravity, in Einstein Gauss– Bonnet gravity and in Horndeski theory. This method have been used also to compute the conserved charges of asymptotically Lifshitz black holes of gravity theories whose action contains higher order curvature terms [72], and to compute the mass of threedimensional Lifshitz black hole solutions of New Massive Gravity with a non-minimally coupled scalar field [73]. Here, we shall apply the method to CG with scale invariant matter fields. Now, we will review briefly the method. The variation of the action (2.1) yields
128 129
where d2 xμν = 4√1− g μνρσ dxρ ∧ dxσ and
130
JID:PLB AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.5 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
1
Kˆ =
√
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
− g K μν
s =1
−
√ − g K μν
s =0
(3.15)
.
The integration is performed along a path with parameter s in the solution space 0 ≤ s ≤ 1, and a free parameter Q in the solutions of EOM is parametrized as sQ. Eq. (3.14) is the main result that will allows us to evaluate the conserved charges (mass) of the black hole solutions. The boundary term can be written as
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
μ
μ
μ ( g , δ g ) = W + (φ) ,
(3.16)
μ
where the first term W denotes the contribution from the Weylμ squared term and the second term (φ) denotes the contribution coming from the scalar field. The generic formula for the surface term in theories which contains only invariants of the curvature tensor can be taken by [75] μ
19
W (δ g ) = 2[ P μ(α β)γ ∇γ δ g α β − δ g α β ∇γ P μ(α β)γ ] ,
20
where
18
P μνρσ =
23 24 25 26 27 28
3.3. Horizon thermodynamics
∂L
(φ)
∂ R μνρσ
= −δφ∇ μ φ
29
−
30
1
12
φ ∇ν hμν − φ 2 ∇ μ h + h∇ μ φ 2 − hμν ∇ν φ 2 2
. (3.19)
31 32
Using Eqs. (3.17) and (3.19), the Noether potentials are found to
33 34 35 36
be
2 1 μν KW = C μνρσ ∇[ρ ξσ ] − 2ξσ (∇ [μ R ν ]σ + g σ [μ ∇ ν ] R )
α
37 38 39 40
μν
K (φ) =
43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65
67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84
1 6
1 2
1 φ ∇ ν ξ μ − φ2∇ μξ ν + ξ ν ∇ μφ2 − ξ μ∇ ν φ2 2
2
(3.20)
Using expression (3.14), we shall compute the masses associated to our solutions. For the time-like Killing vector ξ = −∂t the charge (3.14) corresponds to the mass. Now, we consider the Lifshitz black holes with z = 4 and we take an infinitesimal parametrization of a single parameter path, by considering the perturbation
(3.22)
the Noether potentials related to the energy reads
√ (5α − 48ν 16r σk (θ) − g K tr = − − α 7 3α √ ( α − 48 ν )φ d φ σ (θ) 0 0 k − g Q tr = − , 6α 5
)φ02 k (θ) 5
6
σ
+ O(
1 r2
)
(3.23) (3.24)
where σk (θ) = sin θ, 1, sinh θ for k = 1, 0, −1 respectively. So, the mass of the Lifshitz black holes with z = 4 is given by
(α − 48ν )φ02 ωk M=− 6α 5 = (α − 48ν )
6 r+
3αν
7
48r 12 4 +
4
(−kr+ − 6ν
φ02 )2
4 − 2r+ f (r+ ) (−7kr+ + 2(4α
7
7 + 147ν )φ02 )2 + 14r+ f (r+ ) = 0 .
. (3.21)
φ0 → φ 0 + d φ0 ,
87
In this section, we will employ the method developed by Padmanabhan in [90] in order to study the conserved quantities of the Lifshitz black holes with dynamical exponent z = 4, which, as we have seen, are the only solutions with non-trivial thermodynamics. The method is based on the relation between the first law of thermodynamics and the equations of motion, and it seems to be applicable to a very wide class of theories. In this approach, the conserved quantities can be obtained directly from the equations of motion evaluated on the event horizon. So, considering the E rr component of the field equations, and evaluating the second and third derivatives of f (r ) at the horizon r+ , we arrive to the following equation:
1
6
41 42
66
86
(3.18)
.
On the other hand, we have found that the boundary term coming from the self-interacting conformally coupled scalar field reads μ
Using this result for the mass together with the entropy given in Eq. (3.4) and the temperature given in Eq. (3.5), it is straightforward to show that the first law of black hole thermodynamics dM = T dS holds. For the asymptotically AdS black holes and the Lifshitz black holes with z = 0, we find that they have zero mass M = 0 in all the cases, and this result does not depend of the values of k. Also, as we found in the previous section, they have zero entropy, therefore there is not a conserved charge associated to the integration constants, which can be interpreted as a kind of gravitational hair. Black hole solutions with planar horizon having zero mass and zero entropy have been reported in Lovelock gravity with non-minimally coupled scalar fields [88] and also in the three-dimensional New Massive Gravity with non-minimally coupled scalar fields [12]. The solutions presented in those papers depends on a single integration constant which was interpreted as a gravitational hair, due to there is not a conserved charge associated to it. On the other hand, in pure Lovelock gravity black holes with gravitational hair have been found [89].
85
21 22
(3.17)
5
(3.26)
4r
2
r
4
d (α − 48ν )
+
6 r+
3αν 7
+
1 r+ 5 = f (r+ )d 4π
4 kr+
12αν 5
91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 104 106 107 108
(3.27)
Writing φ0 in terms of the horizon radius φ02 = −(k + 2+ ) 2+ν , and (α −48ν )ωk dr+ multiplying the above equation by the factor we ob6α 2 ν r
90
105
4 7 (−kr+ − 6ν φ02 )2 − 2r+ f (r+ ) = 0 .
89
103
Now, considering that only the first factor in parenthesis can be zero, this equation reduces to
tain
88
3αν 2
110 111 112 113 114 115
ωk
2 2π r + (α − 48ν )ωk
109
116
+a ,
117 118
(3.28)
where a is an additive constant. Therefore, we arrive to an equation with the same form of the first law of black hole thermodynamics. Finally, identifying the Hawking temperature and choosing the constant as a = k6πν , the conserved quantities coincide with the mass and entropy obtained before.
119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126
+
4 kr+
12αν
4. Quasinormal modes
5
127 128
ωk .
(3.25)
In this section we will study the propagation of a conformally coupled scalar field in the backgrounds found in Section 2, and
129 130
JID:PLB
AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.6 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
6
1 2 3
then we find the quasinormal modes analytically in some cases. Perturbations of a conformally coupled test scalar field obey the general relativistic Klein–Gordon equation
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
1
√
−g
18
(4.1)
6
where R is the Ricci escalar. With the help of the following ansatz ϕ = e−iωt Y () R (r ), the Klein-*-Gordon equation reduces to the form 2
d R (r ) dr 2
+
16 17
√ R ∂μ − g g μν ∂ν ϕ = ϕ ,
+
+
3+z r
f (r )
dr
6ω2 (r /)−2z
2 6r 2
+
f (r ) dR (r )
f (r )
f (r )
−
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53
2 k + 3κ r2
2(3 + z(2 + z)) f (r ) + r ((5 + 3z) f (r ) + r f (r ))
2
R (r ) = 0 , (4.2)
where −κ is the eigenvalue of the Laplacian in the base submanifold; so, for spherical horizon κ 2 = l(l + 1) where l = 0, 1, 2, ..., for flat horizon κ 2 is a non-negative integer and for hyperbolic horizon κ 2 = 1/4 + ξ 2 , where ξ ≥ 0 takes discrete real values [91]. Now, defining R (r ) as R (r ) = R˜ (r )/r and using the tortoise coordinate r∗ given by dr∗ = z+1 dr /(r z+1 f (r )), the Klein–Gordon equation can be written as a one-dimensional Schrödinger equation, 2
d R˜ (r∗ ) − + V (r ) R˜ (r∗ ) = ω2 R˜ (r∗ ) , dr∗2 2
(4.3)
with an effective potential V (r ), which is parametrically thought of as V (r∗ ), given by
r 2z+2 2 1 z + 3 f (r )
V (r ) = − f (r )2 2 − + r r f (r ) r 2 2 1 2(k + 3κ ) + 2 + 2 (3 + z( z + 2)) f (r ) − 6r f (r ) r2 + r (3z + 5) f (r ) + r f (r ) . (4.4)
58 59 60 61
Under the change of variable y = 1 − written as
2 r+ , r2
the equation (4.2) can be
1 1 R ( y ) + R ( y ) + y 12 y 2 (1 − y )2
× 3ω 2 2 + 2 y + y 2 +
4(k + 3κ 2 ) y (1 − y ) k + 12ν
φ02
R ( y) = 0 , (4.5)
and if, in addition, we define R ( y ) = y α (1 − y )β F ( y ), the above equation leads to the hypergeometric equation
64 65
y (1 − y ) F ( y ) + [c − (1 + a + b) y] F ( y ) − ab F ( y ) = 0 ,
(4.6)
where
62 63
(k + 4κ 2 − 4ν
φ02 )(k
+ 12ν
69
,
α=±
i ω 2
,
β=
1 2
±
i ω 2
,
and the constants are given by
(4.9) (4.10)
The general solution of the hypergeometric equation (4.6) is
1−c
(4.7)
67 68
φ02 )
2(k + 12ν φ02 )
c = 1 + 2α .
(4.8)
70 71 72 73 74 75 76
(4.11)
77
and it has three regular singular points at y = 0, y = 1, and y = ∞. Here, 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y ) is a hypergeometric function, and C 1 and C 2 are integration constants. Thus, in the vicinity of the horizon y = 0 and using the property F (a, b, c ; 0) = 1, the function R ( y ) behaves as
79
2 F 1 (a
− c + 1, b − c + 1, 2 − c ; y ) ,
78 80 81 82 83 84
R ( y ) = C 1 e α ln y + C 2 e −α ln y , so that the scalar field
ϕ ∼ C1e
−i ω(t +( ln y )/2)
(4.12)
ϕ , for α = α− , can be written as follows: + C2e
−i ω(t −( ln y )/2)
.
(4.13)
85 86 87 88 89
Here, the first term represents an ingoing wave, and the second represents an outgoing wave near the black hole horizon. Imposing the requirement of only ingoing waves on the event horizon, we fix C 2 = 0. Then, the radial solution can be written as
90
R ( y ) = C 1 e α ln y (1 − y )β 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y )
95
= C 1e
− i ω2
ln y
(1 − y )β 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y ) .
91 92 93 94 96
(4.14)
97
To implement boundary conditions at infinity ( y = 1), we apply Kummer’s formula for the hypergeometric function [92],
98
(c )(c − a − b) 2 F 1 (a, b , a + b − c ; 1 − y ) 2 F 1 (a, b , c ; y ) = (c − a)(c − b) (c )(a + b − c ) + (1 − y )c−a−b (a)(b) × 2 F 1 (c − a, c − b, c − a − b + 1; 1 − y ) .
101
(4.15)
In this section, we deduce the exact analytic solution for the Klein–Gordon equation (4.2) in the background described by (2.8).
55 57
b1,2 = α + β ∓
2(k + 12ν φ02 )
66
,
4.1. Quasinormal modes for Lifshitz black holes with z = 0
54 56
(k + 4κ 2 − 4ν φ02 )(k + 12ν φ02 )
+ C2 y
2
41 42
a1,2 = α + β ±
F ( y ) = C 1 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y )
19 20
Taking into consideration the above expression, the radial function (4.14) reads
(c )(c − a − b) ln y R ( y) = C 1e (1 − y )β (c − a)(c − b) × 2 F 1 (a, b, a + b − c ; 1 − y ) i ω (c )(a + b − c ) + C 1 e − 2 ln y (1 − y )1−β (a)(b) × 2 F 1 (c − a, c − b, c − a − b + 1; 1 − y ) ,
100 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111
− i ω2
112 113 114 115 116
(4.16)
117 118 119
and at infinity, it can be written as
(c )(c − a − b) R asymp. ( y ) = C 1 (1 − y ) (c − a)(c − b) (c )(a + b − c ) + C 1 (1 − y )1−β . (a)(b)
99
120 121
β
122 123
(4.17)
The effective potential (4.4) tends to zero at infinity; thus, considering β = β+ and imposing as a boundary condition that only outgoing waves exist at spatial infinity, we set c − a = −n or c − b = −n for n = 0, 1, 2, .... Therefore, the QNFs for the Lifshitz black holes with dynamical exponent z = 0 are given by
124 125 126 127 128 129 130
JID:PLB AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.7 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
1 2
1
ω=±
2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
26 27
2
(4.18)
R ( y ) +
−
y
2 y−1
+
y ( y − 1)( y − y 0 )
y − y0
ω
y( y0
ν φ02 )
+
( y − y 0 )(k + 12ν φ02 )
66
y ( y − 1) H ( y ) + [(b + 1)( y − 1) + (c + 1) y] H ( y )
73
−
i ω
, β=
r+
( y 0 − 1)2 (k − ky 0 − y 0 κ 2 ) − y 0 (1 + y 0 )ω2 2 − 4( y 0 − 1)2 (−3 + 2 y 0 )ν φ02
( y 0 − 1)2 (k + 12ν φ02 )
R ( y)
=0 ,
(4.19)
33 34 35 36 37 38
δ H ( y) + + + H ( y) y y−1 y − y0 λξ y − η + H ( y) = 0 , y ( y − 1)( y − y 0 )
μ
+ C2 y
40
−b
41
α=±
42 44 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54
57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65
1
1
k + 4κ − 4ν
2
2
k + 12ν φ02
φ02
2
φ02
3 2
±
1 2
,
2 2
3r+
2 3r+
81
(k + 3κ 2 ) ,
82 83 84
(k + 3κ 2 + 3ω2 2 ) .
(4.24)
87
1
88
c
89
1
90
c
91
HeunC 0, −b, c , d, − (1 + c )b − − , y , 2 2 (4.25)
1
c
0, b, c , d, − (1 + c )b − − , y 2 2
+
3
k + 3κ 2 k + 12ν φ02
,
(4.22)
with = λ + ξ − μ − δ + 1. The properties of the general Heun function are not well known yet, and therefore we cannot extract the QNMs analytically in the general case. However, there are some special cases in which the Heun function can be reduced to the confluent Heun function or to the hypergeometric function, whose properties are better known. We will focus our attention to these cases in the following.
97 98 99 100
105
Thus, in the vicinity of the horizon y = 0 and using the property HeunC (0, b, c , d, e , 0) = 1, the function R ( y ) behaves as
106
R ( y ) = C 1 e α ln y + C 2 e −α ln y ,
109
(4.26)
ϕ , for α = α− , can be written as follows:
−i ω(t +(2 ln y )/r+ )
R ( y) = C 1e
−
2 − i ωr +
c 2
ln y
+ C2e
−i ω(t −(2 ln y )/r+ )
Here, the first term represents an ingoing wave, and the second represents an outgoing wave near the black hole horizon. Imposing the requirement of only ingoing waves on the event horizon, we fix C 2 = 0. Then, the radial solution can be written as
2 + 6α (β − 1) + 3β(β − 2) − 3γ (γ + 1)
96
104
λ = 2α + β + γ , ξ = β + γ y0
94
103
ϕ ∼ C1e
+
93
102
2
μ = 1 + 2α , δ = 2(−1 + β) , = 2(1 + γ )
92
101
1
+ C 2 y −α (1 − y )β HeunC 0, −b, c , d, − (1 + c )b
so that the scalar field
η = −1 + β(3 − β) + 2α (1 + γ ) + γ (2 + γ )
85 86
2
(4.21)
75
80
2
− − , y . ,
72
79
,
R ( y ) = C 1 y α (1 − y )β HeunC
and the constants are given by
55 56
k + 12ν
γ =− ±
45
, β=
y0 − 1
43
y0
71
95
c
i ω
2
where HeunC is the confluent Heun function, and C 1 and C 2 are integration constants. So, the radial function R ( y ) is given by
where
39
±
(4.20)
70
78
H ( y ) = C 1 HeunC 0, b, c , d, − (1 + c )b − − , y 2 2
r
where y 0 = r+ . If, in addition, we define R ( y ) = y α (1 − y )β ( y 0 − − y )γ H ( y ), the above equation leads to the general Heun equation
32
2
1
b = 2α , c = 2β − 3 , d = −
29 31
3
( y 0 − 1)2 (k + 12ν φ02 )
69
77
2
The solution of Eq. (4.23) is written as
y y 0 ω2 2
68
76
y−1
28 30
(4.23)
where
= −(α + β − 1)2 −
2( y 0 − 1)
67
74
+ (dy − ) H ( y ) = 0 ,
R ( y)
y 20 2 2 − 1)2 (k + 12
y 0 ( y 0 − 1)(−κ 2 + 4ν φ02 )
+
2
1
+
+
1
4.2.1. k + 12ν φ02 = 0 First, we consider the special case k + 12ν φ02 = 0. In this case there is only one horizon r+ = − A for A negative. Using r the change of variable y = 1 − r+ , and defining R ( y ) = y α (1 − β y ) H ( y ), the Klein–Gordon equation leads to the confluent Heun differential equation
α=±
Under the change of variable y = the Klein–Gordon equation (4.2) in the background described by (2.10) can be written as
24 25
φ02
(1 + 2n) .
r −r+ , r −r−
22 23
k + 12ν
i
−
4.2. Quasinormal modes for AdS black holes
20 21
k + 4κ 2 − 4ν φ02
The imaginary part of the QNFs is always negative for k = 1, 0, −1 and ν < 0; so, in these cases the propagation of a scalar field is formally stable in this background. However, for the topological black holes with k = −1 and ν > ξ 2 /φ02 the QNFs are purely imaginary, and if the parameter ξ 2 takes values in the range 0 ≤ ξ 2 < 4ν φ02 − 1/4, the imaginary part of the fundamental quasinormal frequency is positive, implying that the propagation of a scalar field on the topological black hole is unstable.
18 19
−
7
(4.27)
.
− , y .
108 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120
1
(1 − y )β HeunC 0, b, c , d, − (1 + c )b
107
121
2
122
(4.28)
123 124 125
condition. The effective potential (4.4) tends to 2Dirichlet2 boundary κ − 4ν φ0 /2 and it is possible to impose as a boundary condi-
126
tion that the scalar field vanishes at spatial infinity. To implement boundary conditions at infinity ( y = 1), we use the connection formula for the confluent Heun function [93,94]
128
127 129 130
JID:PLB
AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.8 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
8
1
HeunC (0, b, c , d, e ; y )
2
(b + 1)(−c ) HeunC (0, c , b, −d, e + d; 1 − y ) (1 − c + k)(b − k) (b + 1)(c ) + D 2 (1 − y )−c (1 + c + s)(b − s) × HeunC (0, −c , b, −d, e + d; 1 − y ) , (4.29)
= D1
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
where the parameters of the confluent Heun function satisfy the following equations
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42
k2 + (1 − b − c )k − − b − c +
45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52
2
2
s + (1 − b + c )s − − b(c + 1) +
=0, d 2
=0.
(4.30) (4.31)
(b + 1)(−c ) R asymp. ( y ) = C 1 D 1 (1 − y )β (1 − c + k)(b − k) (b + 1)(c ) + C 1 D 2 (1 − y )3−β . (1 + c + s)(b − s)
√
F=
− g g rr 2i
∗
R ∂r R − R ∂r R
∗
(4.33)
,
at infinity is given by 3 (3 − 2β) | C 1 |2 r + F ( y → 1) ∝ − Im( A ∗1 A 2 ) , 2
(4.34)
where we have used the Eq. (4.32) to obtain the above expression, and A 1 and A 2 are given by
53 55
(b + 1)(−c ) (b + 1)(c ) , A2 = D 2 . (1 − c + k)(b − k) (1 + c + s)(b − s)
56
(4.35)
57
The flux vanishes at infinity if 1 − c + k = −n, b − k = −n, 1 + c + s = −n or b − s = −n for n = 0, 1, 2, .... Therefore, the discrete frequencies for the AdS black holes are given by
54
58 59 60
A1 = D 1
61 62 63 64 65
R ( y) +
+
1
+
y
6(n + 1) r+ + (k + 3κ ) 2 2
ω = −i
122 (n
2
+ 1)r+
2
,
1
( y − 1)(−κ
(4.36)
for β = 1 or β = 2. The QNFs are purely imaginary and the imaginary part is always negative for k = 1, 0; so, in these cases the
68 69 70 71
74 75 76
77 78
y+ ) + 2ky + 4 φ02 y ( y 4(k + 12 φ02 ) y 2 (1 − y )2
ω
the Klein–
R ( y)
2(1 − y ) 2
2 r+ , r2
2 2
ν
ν
+ 5)
79
R ( y) = 0 ,
80 81
(4.37) equation leads to the hypergeometric equation
Now, for β = 1 or β = 2, both terms of this expression go to zero for y → 1. So, the Dirichlet boundary condition is automatically satisfied for any value of ω , which implies a continuous spectrum and instability. It is worth mentioning that this kind of behavior have been observed in other AdS and Lifshitz black holes geometries for scalar type electromagnetic field perturbations [66,95], see also Refs. [96,97] where continuous spectrum of frequencies have been obtained for a two-dimensional black hole. Nevertheless, it is expected that the QNFs depend on the physical parameters that describe the black hole and the test field. In [66,95] a different boundary condition was proposed, by canceling the leading term of the asymptotic behavior of the radial function well defined QNFs were obtained. We will show that for the AdS black hole a discrete set of QNFs, depending on the physical parameters of the black hole and the test field, can be obtained by considering Neumann boundary condition. Neumann boundary condition. It is also possible to consider that the flux of the scalar field vanishes at spatial infinity, which implies the Neumann boundary condition. The flux
67
73
In this case, under the change of variable y = 1 − Gordon equation (4.2) can be written as
and if, in addition, we define R ( y ) = y α (1 − y )β F ( y ), the above
(4.32)
66
72
4.2.2. A = 0
Taking into consideration the above expression, the radial function (4.28) at the asymptotic region y → 1 reads
43 44
d
propagation of a scalar field is formally stable in this background. However, for the topological black holes with k = −1 and if the parameter ξ 2 takes values in the range 0 ≤ ξ 2 < 1/12 − 2(r+ /)2 , the imaginary part of the fundamental quasinormal frequency is positive, implying that the propagation of a scalar field on the topological black hole is unstable.
82 83 84 85
y (1 − y ) F ( y ) + [c − (1 + a + b) y] F ( y ) − ab F ( y ) = 0 , (4.38)
86
where
88
i ω
α=±
β=
,
2 −k − 12ν φ02
3 4
±
1 4
87 89
(4.39)
,
90 91 92
and the constants are given by
a1,2 = −
b1,2 = −
1 4 1 4
+α+β ±
(k + 4κ 2 − 4ν φ02 )(k + 12ν φ02 )
+α+β ∓
93
4(k + 12ν φ02 )
(k + 4κ 2 − 4ν φ02 )(k + 12ν φ02 ) 4(k + 12ν φ02 )
c = 1 + 2α .
94
,
(4.40)
95 96 97 98
.
(4.41)
99 100
(4.42)
101
The general solution of the hypergeometric equation (4.38) is
102
F ( y ) = C 1 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y )
104
+ C 2 y 1−c 2 F 1 (a − c + 1, b − c + 1, 2 − c ; y ) ,
103 105
(4.43)
106
and it has three regular singular points at y = 0, y = 1, and y = ∞. Here, 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y ) is a hypergeometric function, and C 1 and C 2 are integration constants. Thus, in the vicinity of the horizon y = 0 and using the property F (a, b, c , 0) = 1, the function R ( y ) behaves as
107
R ( y ) = C 1 e α ln y + C 2 e −α ln y ,
113
so that the scalar field
ϕ ∼ C1e
(4.44)
ϕ , for α = α− , can be written as follows:
−i ω t +( ln y )/ 2 −k−12ν φ02
+ C 2e
−i ω t −( ln y )/ 2 −k−12ν φ02
110 111 112 114 115 117 118 119
.
(4.45)
120 121 122 123 124 125 126
R ( y ) = C 1 e α ln y (1 − y )β 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y )
= C 1e
109
116
Here, the first term represents an ingoing wave, and the second represents an outgoing wave near the black hole horizon. Imposing the requirement of only ingoing waves on the event horizon, we fix C 2 = 0. Then, the radial solution can be written as −(i ω ln y )/ 2 −k−12ν φ02
108
127 128
(1 − y )β 2 F 1 (a, b, c ; y ) .
129
(4.46)
130
JID:PLB AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.9 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Dirichlet boundary condition. The effective potential (4.4) tends to κ 2 − 4ν φ02 /2 and it is possible to impose as a boundary condition that the scalar field vanishes at spatial infinity. To implement boundary conditions at infinity ( y = 1), we apply Kummer’s formula for the hypergeometric function (4.15); thus, the radial function (4.46) reads
8 9
R ( y) = C 1e
10 12 13
+ C 1e
14 15
−(i ω ln y )/ 2 −k−12ν φ02
(1 − y )3/2−β
(c )(a + b − c ) 2 F 1 (c − a,c − b ,c − a − b + 1;1 − y ), (a)(b)
×
16
(1 − y )β
(c )(c − a − b) 2 F 1 (a, b , a + b − c ; 1 − y ) (c − a)(c − b)
×
11
−(i ω ln y )/ 2 −k−12ν φ02
17
(4.47)
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
and at infinity, it can be written as
(c )(c − a − b) R asymp. ( y ) = C 1 (1 − y )β (c − a)(c − b) (c )(a + b − c ) + C 1 (1 − y )3/2−β . (a)(b)
39 40 41 42 44
3 (3/2 − 2β) | C 1 |2 r + F ( y → 1) ∝ − Im( A ∗1 A 2 ) 2
45 46 47 48
(c )(c − a − b) (c )(a + b − c ) , A2 = . (c − a)(c − b) (a)(b)
50 52
ω1 = ±
53 54 55 56 57
62 63 64 65
2
φ02
2
k + 4κ − 4ν 2
φ02
2
−i
−i
−k − 12ν
φ02 (3 + 4n)
2
−k − 12ν
φ02 (1 + 4n)
2
,
,
(4.51)
for β = 1/2 or β = 1. Both sets of QNFs can be written concisely as:
59 61
k + 4κ − 4ν
ω2 = ±
58 60
(4.50)
The flux vanishes at infinity if c − a = −n, c − b = −n, a = −n or b = −n for n = 0, 1, 2, .... Therefore, the discrete frequencies for the AdS black holes are given by
49 51
(4.49)
where we have used the Eq. (4.48) to obtain the above expression, and A 1 and A 2 are given by
A1 =
ω=±
k + 4κ 2 − 4ν φ02 2
−i
−k − 12ν φ02 (2n + 1) 2
66 67 68 69 70
4.3. Quasinormal modes for Lifshitz black holes with z = 4
71 72
It seems difficult to obtain analytical solutions to the radial equation (4.2) in the background described by (2.12). However, it is worth mentioning that the radial equation at infinity r → ∞ can be written as
73
r 2 R (r ) + 7r R (r ) + 9R (r ) = 0 ,
78
(4.53)
whose solution is R asymp. (r ) = C 1 /r 3 + C 2 ln(r )/r 3 , and the field goes to zero at infinity. Therefore, the Dirichlet boundary condition is automatically satisfied for any value of ω , and there is no discrete set of QNFs. This is similar to what occurs for the AdS black holes discussed before. Probably, a discrete set of QNFs exists when considering a different boundary condition, such as Neumann boundary condition, and the obtention of it could require of numerical techniques.
74 75 76 77 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87
5. Final remarks
89 90
Now, considering β = 1/2 or β = 1, we obtain that, similar to the previous case, both terms of this expression go to zero for y → 1. So, the Dirichlet boundary condition is automatically satisfied for any value of ω , which implies a continuous spectrum and instability. However, we will show that a discrete set of QNFs, depending on the physical parameters of the black hole and the test field, can be obtained by considering Neumann boundary condition. Neumann boundary condition. It is also possible to consider that the flux of the scalar field vanishes at spatial infinity, which implies the Neumann boundary condition. The flux (4.33) at infinity is given by
43
purely imaginary, and if the parameter ξ 2 takes values in the range 0 ≤ ξ 2 < 4ν φ02 − 1/4, the imaginary part of the fundamental quasinormal frequency is positive, implying that the propagation of a scalar field on the topological black hole is unstable.
88
(4.48)
37 38
9
.
(4.52)
The imaginary part of the QNFs is always negative for k = 1, 0, −1 and ν < 0; so, in these cases the propagation of a scalar field is formally stable in this background. However, for the topological black holes with k = −1 and ν > ξ 2 /φ02 the QNFs are
We considered a gravitating system consisting of a conformally invariant scalar field coupled to four-dimensional Conformal Weyl Gravity. We found a new class of exact four-dimensional asymptotically AdS and Lifshitz black hole solutions with spherical, flat and hyperbolic event horizons for a certain range of values of the parameters. They are characterized by a scalar field with a power law behavior, which is regular everywhere outside the event horizon and vanishes at spatial infinity. The Lifshitz black hole solutions presented here are characterized by the dynamical exponents z = 0 and z = 4. Then, we discussed the thermodynamics of the solutions. The calculation of the mass was performed by using the generalized off-shell Noether potential method [75], which has been applied to CG and also to other higher derivative gravity theories. In addition, we computed the Wald entropy of the solutions, and we showed that all the black holes satisfy the first law of black hole thermodynamics. It was found that the AdS black holes and the Lifshitz black holes with z = 0 have zero mass and zero entropy, although they have a non-zero temperature; therefore, there is no conserved charge associated with the integration constants, which can be interpreted as a kind of gravitational hair. A similar behavior also occurs with black hole solutions (with planar horizon) obtained in other gravity theories containing higher curvature terms in the action, such as Lovelock gravity and threedimensional New Massive Gravity with non-minimally coupled scalar fields. On the other hand, we found that the Lifshitz black hole with z = 4 has non-zero values of the conserved quantities and thus more interesting thermodynamics. Also, we studied the horizon thermodynamics of the Lifshitz black hole solutions with z = 4, and we demonstrated that the first law of black hole thermodynamics emerges from the field equations evaluated on the horizon. Furthermore, we studied the propagation of a conformally coupled scalar field in these backgrounds and we calculated the QNMs analytically in several cases. We found that for AdS black holes and Lifshitz black holes with z = 4, the Dirichlet boundary condition is automatically satisfied for any value of ω , implying a continuous spectrum. This kind of behavior has been observed in other AdS and Lifshitz black hole geometries for scalar type electromagnetic field perturbations [66,95], see also Refs. [96,97] where continuous spectrum of frequencies have been obtained for a two-dimensional black hole. Nevertheless, it is expected that the
91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130
JID:PLB
AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.10 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
QNFs depend on the physical parameters that describe the black hole and the test field. In [66,95] a different boundary condition was proposed, by canceling the leading term of the asymptotic behavior of the radial function well defined QNFs were obtained. We showed that discrete sets of well defined QNFs, which depend on the physical parameters of the black hole and the test field, can be obtained by considering that the flux of the scalar field vanishes at spatial infinity (Neumann boundary conditions). We obtained analytical expressions for the QNFs of AdS black holes and Lifshitz black holes with z = 0. We found that the discrete QNFs can have real and imaginary parts, and the imaginary part is always negative for black holes with spherical and flat horizon k = 1, 0; so, in these cases the propagation of a scalar field is formally stable in these backgrounds. However, we found that for a topological AdS black hole (with k + 12ν φ02 = 0), and for the topological z = 0 Lifshitz black hole, if the parameter ξ 2 takes values in the range 0 ≤ ξ 2 < 4ν φ02 − 1/4, the imaginary part of the fundamental quasinormal frequency is positive, implying that the propagation of a scalar field on the topological black hole is unstable. Analogously, for a topological AdS black hole, with A = 0, the propagation of a scalar field is unstable if 0 ≤ ξ 2 < 1/12 − 2(r+ /)2 . It would be interesting to explore the possible holographic applications to condensed matter systems of the solutions found here and also to extend this study to a gravitating system with a charged scalar field.
26 27
Acknowledgements
28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35
We would like to thank the anonymous referee for valuable comments which help us to improve the quality of our paper. F.H. would like to thank P.A. González. Y.V. would like to thank G. Giribet for useful comments. This work was partially funded by the Comisión Nacional de Ciencias y Tecnología through FONDECYT Grant 11140674 (F.H.) and by the Dirección de Investigación y Desarrollo de la Universidad de La Serena (F.H. and Y.V.).
36 37
References
[22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] [35] [36] [37] [38] [39] [40] [41] [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] [52]
38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65
[1] S. Kachru, X. Liu, M. Mulligan, Phys. Rev. D 78 (2008) 106005, arXiv:0808.1725 [hep-th]. [2] J.M. Maldacena, Adv. Theor. Math. Phys. 2 (1998) 231, arXiv:hep-th/9711200. [3] S.A. Hartnoll, J. Polchinski, E. Silverstein, D. Tong, J. High Energy Phys. 1004 (2010) 120, arXiv:0912.1061 [hep-th]. [4] K. Balasubramanian, J. McGreevy, Phys. Rev. D 80 (2009) 104039, arXiv:0909. 0263 [hep-th]. [5] R.-G. Cai, Y. Liu, Y.-W. Sun, J. High Energy Phys. 0910 (2009) 080, arXiv:0909. 2807 [hep-th]. [6] E. Ayon-Beato, A. Garbarz, G. Giribet, M. Hassaine, Phys. Rev. D 80 (2009) 104029, arXiv:0909.1347 [hep-th]. [7] R.B. Mann, J. High Energy Phys. 0906 (2009) 075, arXiv:0905.1136 [hep-th]. [8] G. Bertoldi, B.A. Burrington, A. Peet, Phys. Rev. D 80 (2009) 126003, arXiv:0905. 3183 [hep-th]. [9] M.H. Dehghani, R.B. Mann, J. High Energy Phys. 1007 (2010) 019, arXiv:1004. 4397 [hep-th]. [10] E. Ayon-Beato, A. Garbarz, G. Giribet, M. Hassaine, J. High Energy Phys. 1004 (2010) 030, arXiv:1001.2361 [hep-th]. [11] M. Bravo-Gaete, M. Hassaine, arXiv:1312.7736 [hep-th]. [12] F. Correa, M. Hassaine, J. Oliva, Phys. Rev. D 89 (12) (2014) 124005, arXiv:1403. 6479 [hep-th]. [13] A. Alvarez, E. Ayon-Beato, Hernan A. Gonzalez, M. Hassaine, arXiv:1403.5985 [gr-qc]. [14] H. Lu, Y. Pang, C.N. Pope, J.F. Vazquez-Poritz, Phys. Rev. D 86 (2012) 044011, arXiv:1204.1062 [hep-th]. [15] K.S. Stelle, Phys. Rev. D 16 (1977) 953. [16] K.S. Stelle, Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 9 (1978) 353. [17] M.H. Goroff, A. Sagnotti, Nucl. Phys. B 266 (1986) 709. [18] J. Maldacena, arXiv:1105.5632 [hep-th]. [19] G. Anastasiou, R. Olea, Phys. Rev. D 94 (8) (2016) 086008, arXiv:1608.07826 [hep-th]. [20] M.T. Anderson, Math. Res. Lett. 8 (2001) 171, arXiv:math/0011051. [21] R.J. Riegert, Phys. Rev. Lett. 53 (1984) 315.
[53] [54] [55] [56] [57] [58] [59] [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65] [66] [67] [68] [69] [70] [71]
P.D. Mannheim, Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys. 56 (2006) 340, arXiv:astro-ph/0505266. P.D. Mannheim, D. Kazanas, Phys. Rev. D 44 (1991) 417. H.S. Liu, H. Lu, J. High Energy Phys. 1302 (2013) 139, arXiv:1212.6264 [hep-th]. J.L. Said, J. Sultana, K.Z. Adami, Phys. Rev. D 86 (2012) 104009, arXiv:1207.2108 [gr-qc]. Z.Y. Fan, H. Lü, J. High Energy Phys. 1502 (2015) 013, arXiv:1411.5372 [hep-th]. Y. Brihaye, Y. Verbin, Phys. Rev. D 80 (2009) 124048, arXiv:0907.1951 [gr-qc]. K. Meng, L. Zhao, Ann. Phys. 377 (2017) 466, arXiv:1601.07634 [gr-qc]. J. Oliva, D. Tempo, R. Troncoso, Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 24 (2009) 1588, arXiv: 0905.1510 [hep-th]. G. Guralnik, A. Iorio, R. Jackiw, S.Y. Pi, Ann. Phys. 308 (2003) 222, arXiv:hepth/0305117. D. Grumiller, W. Kummer, Ann. Phys. 308 (2003) 211, arXiv:hep-th/0306036. M. Catalán, Y. Vásquez, Phys. Rev. D 90 (10) (2014) 104002, arXiv:1407.6394 [gr-qc]. H. Lü, Y. Pang, C.N. Pope, Phys. Rev. D 87 (10) (2013) 104013, arXiv:1301.7083 [hep-th]. S.A. Hartnoll, C.P. Herzog, G.T. Horowitz, Building a holographic superconductor, Phys. Rev. Lett. 101 (2008) 031601, arXiv:0803.3295 [hep-th]. X.M. Kuang, E. Papantonopoulos, J. High Energy Phys. 1608 (2016) 161, arXiv: 1607.04928 [hep-th]. E.J. Brynjolfsson, U.H. Danielsson, L. Thorlacius, T. Zingg, J. Phys. A 43 (2010) 065401, arXiv:0908.2611 [hep-th]. T.P. Sotiriou, Class. Quantum Gravity 32 (21) (2015) 214002, arXiv:1505.00248 [gr-qc]. C.A.R. Herdeiro, E. Radu, Int. J. Mod. Phys. D 24 (09) (2015) 1542014, arXiv: 1504.08209 [gr-qc]. M.S. Volkov, arXiv:1601.08230 [gr-qc]. T. Regge, J.A. Wheeler, Phys. Rev. 108 (1957) 1063. F.J. Zerilli, Phys. Rev. D 2 (1970) 2141. F.J. Zerilli, Phys. Rev. Lett. 24 (1970) 737. K.D. Kokkotas, B.G. Schmidt, Living Rev. Relativ. 2 (1999) 2, arXiv:gr-qc/ 9909058. H.-P. Nollert, Class. Quantum Gravity 16 (1999) R159. R.A. Konoplya, A. Zhidenko, Rev. Mod. Phys. 83 (2011) 793, arXiv:1102.4014 [gr-qc]. B.P. Abbott, et al., LIGO Scientific Collaboration, Virgo Collaboration, Phys. Rev. Lett. 116 (6) (2016) 061102. G.T. Horowitz, V.E. Hubeny, Phys. Rev. D 62 (2000) 024027, arXiv:hep-th/ 9909056. J.D. Bekenstein, Lett. Nuovo Cimento 11 (1974) 467. S. Hod, Phys. Rev. Lett. 81 (1998) 4293, arXiv:gr-qc/9812002. G. Kunstatter, Phys. Rev. Lett. 90 (2003) 161301, arXiv:gr-qc/0212014. M. Maggiore, Phys. Rev. Lett. 100 (2008) 141301, arXiv:0711.3145 [gr-qc]. B. Cuadros-Melgar, J. de Oliveira, C.E. Pellicer, Phys. Rev. D 85 (2012) 024014, arXiv:1110.4856 [hep-th]. P.A. Gonzalez, J. Saavedra, Y. Vasquez, Int. J. Mod. Phys. D 21 (2012) 1250054, arXiv:1201.4521 [gr-qc]. Y.S. Myung, T. Moon, Phys. Rev. D 86 (2012) 024006, arXiv:1204.2116 [hep-th]. R. Becar, P.A. Gonzalez, Y. Vasquez, Int. J. Mod. Phys. D 22 (2013) 1350007, arXiv:1210.7561 [gr-qc]. A. Giacomini, G. Giribet, M. Leston, J. Oliva, S. Ray, Phys. Rev. D 85 (2012) 124001, arXiv:1203.0582 [hep-th]. M.K. Zangeneh, B. Wang, A. Sheykhi, Z.Y. Tang, arXiv:1701.03644 [hep-th]. W. Sybesma, S. Vandoren, J. High Energy Phys. 1505 (2015) 021, arXiv:1503. 07457 [hep-th]. R. Becar, P.A. Gonzalez, Y. Vasquez, Eur. Phys. J. C 76 (2) (2016) 78, arXiv:1510. 06012 [gr-qc]. M. Catalan, E. Cisternas, P.A. Gonzalez, Y. Vasquez, Astrophys. Space Sci. 361 (6) (2016) 189, arXiv:1404.3172 [gr-qc]. P.A. Gonzalez, F. Moncada, Y. Vasquez, Eur. Phys. J. C 72 (2012) 2255, arXiv: 1205.0582 [gr-qc]. S. Lepe, J. Lorca, F. Pena, Y. Vasquez, Phys. Rev. D 86 (2012) 066008, arXiv: 1205.4460 [hep-th]. P.A. González, Y. Vásquez, R.N. Villalobos, Eur. Phys. J. C 77 (9) (2017) 579, arXiv:1704.00413 [hep-th]. M. Catalan, E. Cisternas, P.A. Gonzalez, Y. Vasquez, Eur. Phys. J. C 74 (3) (2014) 2813, arXiv:1312.6451 [gr-qc]. A. Lopez-Ortega, Rev. Mex. Fis. 60 (5) (2014) 357, arXiv:1407.0966 [gr-qc]. A. López-Ortega, Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 46 (2014) 1756, arXiv:1406.0126 [gr-qc]. N. Bai, Y.H. Gao, B.G. Qi, X.B. Xu, Mod. Phys. Lett. A 28 (2013) 1350145. P.A. Gonzalez, Y. Vasquez, Astrophys. Space Sci. 361 (7) (2016) 224, arXiv:1509. 00802 [hep-th]. R. Becar, P.A. Gonzalez, Y. Vasquez, Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 49 (2) (2017) 26, arXiv: 1510.04605 [hep-th]. D.O. Devecioglu, O. Sarioglu, Phys. Rev. D 83 (2011) 021503, arXiv:1010.1711 [hep-th]. D.O. Devecioglu, O. Sarioglu, Phys. Rev. D 83 (2011) 124041, arXiv:1103.1993 [hep-th].
66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130
JID:PLB AID:33825 /SCO Doctopic: Theory
[m5Gv1.3; v1.236; Prn:22/05/2018; 7:46] P.11 (1-11)
F. Herrera, Y. Vásquez / Physics Letters B ••• (••••) •••–•••
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
[72] Y. Gim, W. Kim, S.H. Yi, J. High Energy Phys. 1407 (2014) 002, arXiv:1403.4704 [hep-th]. [73] E. Ayón-Beato, M. Bravo-Gaete, F. Correa, M. Hassaïne, M.M. Juárez-Aubry, J. Oliva, Phys. Rev. D 91 (6) (2015) 064006, Addendum: Phys. Rev. D 96 (4) (2017) 049903, arXiv:1501.01244 [gr-qc]. [74] H.A. Gonzalez, D. Tempo, R. Troncoso, J. High Energy Phys. 1111 (2011) 066, arXiv:1107.3647 [hep-th]. [75] W. Kim, S. Kulkarni, S.H. Yi, Phys. Rev. Lett. 111 (8) (2013) 081101, Erratum: Phys. Rev. Lett. 112 (7) (2014) 079902, arXiv:1306.2138 [hep-th]. [76] L.F. Abbott, S. Deser, Nucl. Phys. B 195 (1982) 76. [77] S. Deser, B. Tekin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 89 (2002) 101101, arXiv:hep-th/0205318. [78] R.M. Wald, Phys. Rev. D 48 (8) (1993) R3427, arXiv:gr-qc/9307038. [79] J.v. narlikar, A.k. kembhavi, Lett. Nuovo Cimento 19 (1977) 517. [80] C. Bambi, L. Modesto, L. Rachwał, J. Cosmol. Astropart. Phys. 1705 (05) (2017) 003, arXiv:1611.00865 [gr-qc]. [81] G. Barnich, F. Brandt, Nucl. Phys. B 633 (2002) 3, arXiv:hep-th/0111246. [82] G. Barnich, Class. Quantum Gravity 20 (2003) 3685, arXiv:hep-th/0301039. [83] J.J. Peng, Eur. Phys. J. C 74 (11) (2014) 3156, arXiv:1407.4875 [gr-qc]. [84] J.J. Peng, Phys. Lett. B 752 (2016) 191, arXiv:1511.06516 [gr-qc]. [85] N. Deruelle, J. Katz, S. Ogushi, Class. Quantum Gravity 21 (2004) 1971, arXiv: gr-qc/0310098. [86] T. Padmanabhan, Rep. Prog. Phys. 73 (2010) 046901, arXiv:0911.5004 [gr-qc].
11
[87] A. Bouchareb, G. Clement, Class. Quantum Gravity 24 (2007) 5581, arXiv:0706. 0263 [gr-qc]. [88] F. Correa, M. Hassaine, J. High Energy Phys. 1402 (2014) 014, arXiv:1312.4516 [hep-th]. [89] A. Anabalon, F. Canfora, A. Giacomini, J. Oliva, Phys. Rev. D 84 (2011) 084015, arXiv:1108.1476 [hep-th]. [90] T. Padmanabhan, Res. Astron. Astrophys. 12 (2012) 891, arXiv:1207.0505 [astroph.CO]. [91] N.L. Balazs, A. Voros, Phys. Rep. 143 (1986) 109. [92] M. Abramowitz, A. Stegun, Handbook of Mathematical Functions, Dover Publications, New York, 1970. [93] A.Ya. Kazakov, J. Phys. A, Math. Gen. 39 (2006) 2339. [94] Y. Kwon, S. Nam, J.D. Park, S.H. Yi, Class. Quantum Gravity 28 (2011) 145006, https://doi.org/10.1088/0264-9381/28/14/145006, arXiv:1102.0138 [hep-th]. [95] D.V. Gómez-Navarro, A. López-Ortega, Rev. Mex. Fis. 63 (6) (2017) 541. [96] S. Estrada-Jiménez, J.R. Gómez-Díaz, A. López-Ortega, Gen. Relativ. Gravit. 45 (2013) 2239, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10714-013-1582-1, arXiv:1308.5943 [grqc]. [97] M. Cruz, M. Gonzalez-Espinoza, J. Saavedra, D. Vargas-Arancibia, Eur. Phys. J. C 76 (2) (2016) 75, https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-016-3927-x, arXiv:1508. 00650 [gr-qc].
66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84
20
85
21
86
22
87
23
88
24
89
25
90
26
91
27
92
28
93
29
94
30
95
31
96
32
97
33
98
34
99
35
100
36
101
37
102
38
103
39
104
40
105
41
106
42
107
43
108
44
109
45
110
46
111
47
112
48
113
49
114
50
115
51
116
52
117
53
118
54
119
55
120
56
121
57
122
58
123
59
124
60
125
61
126
62
127
63
128
64
129
65
130