Originally posted by selfAdjoint
...agrees with the semiclassical calculation of Hawking and Beckenstein. I am given to understand that although the original result was confined to extremal black holes, it has since been extended to more general cases.
Here's a quote from page 39 of http://arxiv.org/hep-th/0303185
giving some idea of the extent to which the result has been made to cover other cases
(the extension has been confined to the extremal "neighborhood"----not enough, it would seem, to cover certain ordinary cases)
-----------
"6.3 Results and conjectures concerning black holes
String theory also has led to results which are relevant for the understanding of black holes.
To express them one has to know that in the state space of a supersymmetric theory there
is a subspace in which a fraction of the supersymmetry transformations are broken, leaving
still unbroken a number of supersymmetries at least twice the dimension of the spinors in
that dimension. These are known as BPS states...
Classical supergravity has BPS states (i.e. classical solutions), among which are black
holes whose charges are equal to their masses[145]. These are also called extremal because
there is a theorem that the charges cannot exceed their masses. ...
The extremal black holes have zero Hawking temperature but nonzero Bekenstein entropy[145]...
The results in string theory do not concern, precisely, black holes, as they are found in
a limit in which the gravitational constant is turned off. But they concern systems with the
same quantum numbers as certain black holes, which, it may be argued, may become black
holes if the gravitational constant is turned up to a sufficiently strong value. Still they are
very impressive,
1. For certain compactifications, with d = 3, 4 or 5 at directions, and in the limit of
vanishing g
string, and hence G
Newton, there are BPS states of string theory including D-branes, which have the same mass, charges and angular momenta of an extremal black hole in d dimensions. The number of such states is in all cases exactly equal to the exponential of the Bekenstein entropy of the corresponding black hole[146, 147, 148].
2. If one perturbs away from the BPS condition for the string theory states, to a near
extremal condition, and constructs a thermal ensemble, the spectrum of the Hawking radiation from the corresponding near extremal black hole is reproduced exactly, including the grey body factors[148].
These results are very impressive; the agreement between the formulas obtained for en-
tropy and spectra between the D-brane systems and black holes are staggeringly precise. It
is hard to believe that this level of agreement is not significant. At the same time, there are
two big issues. First the D-brane systems are not black holes. Second it has not been found
possible to extend the results away from the neighborhood of extremal, BPS states, so as
to apply to ordinary black holes.
We are then left with a conjecture:
• Black hole conjecture.
If one turns the gravitational constant up in the presence
of a thermal ensemble of states which as described above, reproduce the entropy and temperature of an extreme or near extremal black hole, one can construct a string
theoretic description of quantum black hole spacetimes. This will extend also to far
from extremal black holes. [my emphasis]
..."
A more condensed summary is on page 61, where the corresponding LQG situation is also reviewed
since this is an exclusively String thread, IIRC, I will start an LQG thread about the BH entropy result
this will allow this thread to stay more on topic, hopefully