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Phys. Rev. D 76, 044001 (2007) [9 pages]

Nonextremal black holes are BPS

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Christopher M. Miller1,*, Koenraad Schalm1,2,†, and Erick J. Weinberg1,3,‡
1Department of Physics, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027, USA
2Institute for Theoretical Physics University of Amsterdam, Valckenierstraat 65, Amsterdam, 1018XE
3School of Physics, Korea Institute for Advanced Study 207-43, Cheongnyangni2-dong, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul 130-722, Korea

Received 26 January 2007; published 3 August 2007

Extremal charged black holes are BPS solutions. It is commonly thought that their nonextremal counterparts are not. Further, experience with BPS solutions in flat spacetime suggests that all BPS solutions are supersymmetric; i.e. that they are invariant under some supersymmetry charges of either the original field theory or an appropriately extended version thereof. Using nonextremal Reissner-Nordström black holes as counterexamples, we show that neither of these expectations is universally valid. These black holes correspond to a one-parameter family of BPS solutions. By showing that, subject to one very plausible assumption, no generalized Killing spinor can be constructed for these, we show that there is no supergravity theory for which these BPS solutions preserve a fraction of the supersymmetry, nor is there an associated Witten-Nester positive energy bound.

© 2007 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.76.044001
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.76.044001
PACS:
04.70.Bw, 04.40.Nr, 04.65.+e

*cmiller@phys.columbia.edu

schalm@science.uva.nl

ejw@phys.columbia.edu

§Current address.