Chronos said:
This is an issue worth discussing:
http://www.arxiv.org/gr-qc/0304042
Do black holes radiate?
Authors: Adam D. Helfer
I have been looking at it. It is a review article that cites many other articles which have questioned, or critically examined, Hawking radiation. It is hard to assess this review article without checking some of the sources.
Some of the sources can be found on line. He cites
Ted Jacobson 1993 Phys Rev D48 728–741
and this is available as
http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9303103
I looked at the Ted Jacobson paper and it tended to confirm what your author Adam Helfer says. One cannot be absolutely sure that black holes evaporate. there has certainly been no empirical observation of hawking radiation, but on top of that the theoretical derivation is not certain because it extrapolates to very high energies (planck scale) where the physics is not known.
my impression of Jacobson is that he is very reliable and does not say things lightly. his papers are highly cited.
Helfer's bibliography seems good----he has stuff from Ashtekar, Unruh, Bekenstein.
He also cites authors like Carlip who support that Hawking radiation should be just like Hawking says, and that any problems with the theoretical derivation can be fixed. In other words scholarly evenhandedness.
I still think that it is kind of maverick to question hawking radiation. But I have to acknowledge that this Adam Helfer paper is scholarly. As far as I have been able to tell he makes the case that one still has to allow for the possibility that there isn't as much radiation, or that it has a different spectrum (not the simple thermal spectrum) and maybe even that the holes do not finally evaporate.
Personally I picture them like drops of water bouncing around on a hot skillet, and i like the idea that they evaporate, so I am disappointed to learn that this is questionable and i hope that evaporation will be vindicated.