J 2025

Transition from regular black holes to wormholes in covariant effective quantum gravity: Scattering, quasinormal modes, and Hawking radiation

KONOPLYA, Roman and O. S. STASHKO

Basic information

Original name

Transition from regular black holes to wormholes in covariant effective quantum gravity: Scattering, quasinormal modes, and Hawking radiation

Authors

KONOPLYA, Roman and O. S. STASHKO

Edition

Physical Review D, 2025, 2470-0010

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Field of Study

10308 Astronomy

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Impact factor

Impact factor: 5.300 in 2024

Organization unit

Institute of physics in Opava

UT WoS

001493107700006

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-105002794297

Keywords in English

partcile-emission rates; massless particlesl; stability

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 19/1/2026 13:06, Mgr. Pavlína Jalůvková

Abstract

In the original language

Utilizing the Hamiltonian constraints approach, a quantum-corrected solution has been derived in Zhang et al., which describes either a regular black hole or a traversable wormhole, contingent upon the value of the quantum parameter. In this work, we compute the quasinormal modes associated with axial gravitational and test fields' perturbations of these objects. We see that, due to quantum corrections near the event horizon, the first several overtones deviate from their Schwarzschild values at an increasing rate. The transition between the black hole and wormhole states is marked by modifications in the late-time signal. Our findings reveal that the fundamental quasinormal modes of quantum-corrected black holes exhibit only slight deviations from those of the classical Schwarzschild solution. However, at the transition, the spectrum undergoes significant changes, with the wormhole state characterized by exceptionally longlived quasinormal modes. In addition, we calculate absorption cross sections of partial waves, greybody factors and energy emission rates of Hawking radiation.