Strong cosmic censorship versus Λ - Mihalis Dafermos, University of Cambridge

Friday 2nd December, 4pm, Lecture Theatre 1

Reception afterwards in the Common Room.

The strong cosmic censorship conjecture is a fundamental open problem in classical general relativity, first put forth by Roger Penrose in the early 70s. This is essentially the question of whether general relativity is a deterministic theory. Perhaps the most exciting arena where the validity of the conjecture is challenged is the interior of rotating black holes, and there has been a lot of work in the past 50 years in identifying mechanisms ensuring that at least some formulation of the conjecture be true. It turns out that when a nonzero cosmological constant Λ is added to the Einstein equations, these underlying mechanisms change in an unexpected way, and the validity of the conjecture depends on a detailed understanding of subtle aspects of black hole scattering theory, surprisingly involving, in the case of negative Λ, some number theory. Does strong cosmic censorship survive the challenge of non-zero Λ? This talk will try to address this question.

Photo

Bulletin category
Weight
-1
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Last updated on 02 Dec 2022 11:07.