Fate of the first traversible wormhole: Black hole collapse or inflationary expansion

May, 2002
10 pages
Published in:
  • Phys.Rev.D 66 (2002) 044005
e-Print:

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Abstract: (arXiv)
We study numerically the stability of Morris & Thorne's first traversible wormhole, shown previously by Ellis to be a solution for a massless ghost Klein-Gordon field. Our code uses a dual-null formulation for spherically symmetric space-time integration, and the numerical range covers both universes connected by the wormhole. We observe that the wormhole is unstable against Gaussian pulses in either exotic or normal massless Klein-Gordon fields. The wormhole throat suffers a bifurcation of horizons and either explodes to form an inflationary universe or collapses to a black hole, if the total input energy is respectively negative or positive. As the perturbations become small in total energy, there is evidence for critical solutions with a certain black-hole mass or Hubble constant. The collapse time is related to the initial energy with an apparently universal critical exponent. For normal matter, such as a traveller traversing the wormhole, collapse to a black hole always results. However, carefully balanced additional ghost radiation can maintain the wormhole for a limited time. The black-hole formation from a traversible wormhole confirms the recently proposed duality between them. The inflationary case provides a mechanism for inflating, to macroscopic size, a Planck-sized wormhole formed in space-time foam.
  • 04.40.Nr
  • 04.70.Bw
  • 04.25.Dm
  • 98.80.Cq
  • wormhole: stability
  • black hole: production
  • Klein-Gordon equation
  • inflation
  • wormhole: perturbation
  • ghost