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The generators
$V_n^i$ of the$W_{1+\infty}$ algebra are characterized by a mode index$n \in Z$ and a conformal spin$h = i+1$ , and satisfy the algebra [25]$ \begin{split} [V_n^i, V_m^j] =& (j n-i m)V_{n+m}^{i+j-1}+q(i,j,n,m)V_{n+m}^{i+j-3}+\cdots\\&+c^i(n)\delta^{ij} \delta_{m+n,0}, \end{split}$
(1) where
$q(i,j,n,m)$ are the pertinent polynomials, and$c^i(n)$ represents the relativistic quantum anomaly. The dots stand for a series of terms involving the operators$V_{n+m}^{i+j-1-2k}$ .In the simplest case, the generators
$V_n^0$ and$V_n^1$ form a sub-algebra of the$W_{1+\infty}$ algebra:$ \begin{split} \left[ {V_n^0,V_m^0} \right] =& nc{\delta _{n + m,0}},\\ \left[ {V_n^1,V_m^0} \right] =& - mV_{n + m}^0,\\ \left[ {V_n^1,V_m^1} \right] =& (n - m)V_{n + m}^1 + \displaystyle\frac{c}{{12}}n\left( {{n^2} - 1} \right){\delta _{n + m,0}}, \end{split} $
(2) with the central charge
$c = 1$ . It contains the abelian Kac-Moody algebra and the$c = 1$ Virasoro algebra.All unitary, irreducible, highest-weight representations were found by Kac and Radul [26, 27]. This result was applied to the incompressible quantum Hall fluid by Cappelli et al. [28, 29]. These representations exist only for positive integer central charges
$c = m = 1,2,\cdots$ . If$c = 1$ , the representations are equivalent to those of the abelian Kac-Moody algebra$\widehat{U(1)}$ of$W_{1+\infty}$ , corresponding to the edge excitations of the single abelian Chern-Simons theory. For$c = m = 2,3,\cdots$ , there are two kinds of representations, generic and degenerate, depending on the weight. The generic representations are equivalent to the corresponding representations of the multi-component abelian algebra$\widehat{U(1)}^m$ , which corresponds to the edge excitations of the multiple abelian Chern-Simons theory. On the other hand, the degenerate representations are contained in the$\widehat{U(1)}^m$ representations.Any unitary, irreducible representation contains a bottom state – the highest-weight state, and an infinite tow (descendants) above it. The highest-weight state
$|\Omega\rangle$ is defined by the condition$ V_n^i |\Omega \rangle = 0, \quad \forall n>0, i\geqslant 0. $
(3) Using the polynomials of
$V_n^i (n<0)$ in$|\Omega \rangle$ gives the other excitations.It was claimed that the black hole can be considered as a quantum spin Hall state in three-dimensional spacetime [12, 13]. A quantum spin Hall state can be realized as a bilayer integer quantum Hall system with opposite
$T-$ symmetry. Hence, the symmetry algebra for a quantum spin Hall state is$W_{1+\infty} \otimes \bar{W}_{1+\infty}$ , which has opposite chirality. For the integer quantum Hall fluid$c = 1$ , the representation is the same as of the$\widehat{U(1)}$ algebra. For black holes, the corresponding algebra is$W = \widehat{U(1)}\otimes \widehat{\bar{U}(1)}$ , which has opposite chirality. This result can also be obtained from the Chern-Simons theory [30].We consider now the representation of the algebra
$W = \widehat{U(1)}\otimes \widehat{\bar{U}(1)}$ [31]. First, let us consider the chiral part$\widehat{U(1)}$ . The generators$\alpha_n^+$ satisfy$ [\alpha^+_n, \alpha^+_m] = n \delta_{n+m,0}. $
(4) All
$V_n^i$ can be written as polynomials of the current modes$\alpha^+_n$ .All unitary, irreducible representations can be built on top of the highest-weight state
$|r_1 \rangle, r_1 \in R$ , which satisfies$ \alpha^+_n |r_1 \rangle = 0 \quad (n>0), \quad \alpha^+_0 |r_1 \rangle = r_1 |r_1 \rangle. $
(5) A general descendant can be written as
$ |\{n_1,n_2,\cdots,n_s\}\rangle = \alpha^+_{-n_1} \alpha^+_{-n_2} \cdots \alpha^+_{-n_s} |r_1\rangle, \;\; n_1\geqslant n_2 \geqslant \cdots \geqslant n_s>0. $
(6) Note that the operator
$\alpha^+_0$ commutes with all other generators, which means that the eigenvalues of$\alpha^+_0$ are the same for all descendants in a given representation.The Virasoro generator
$L_n^+$ can be obtained using the Sugawara construction$ L_n^+ = \frac{1}{2}\sum\limits_{l \in Z}:\alpha^+_{n-l} \alpha^+_l:, $
(7) where
$::$ means normal ordering. Acting on the highest-weight state, this gives$ L^+_n |r_1\rangle = 0 \quad (n>0), \quad L^+_0 |r_1\rangle = \frac{r_1^2}{2}|r_1\rangle. $
(8) which satisfies the Virasoro algebra in (2) with
$c = 1$ .Second, we consider the anti-chiral part. The generators
$\bar{\alpha}_n^+$ satisfy$ [\bar{\alpha}^+_n, \bar{\alpha}^+_m] = -n \delta_{n+m,0}. $
(9) The highest-weight state
$|r_2\rangle, r_2 \in R$ is defined by$ \bar{\alpha}^+_n |r_2\rangle = 0 \quad (n<0), \quad \bar{\alpha}^+_0 |r_2\rangle = r_2 |r_2\rangle. $
(10) The generators
$\bar{L}_n^+$ can also be obtained using the Sugawara construction (7), but unfortunately they do not satisfy the standard Virasoro algebra (2). However, it is possible to define new operators$ \alpha^-_n \equiv \bar{\alpha}^+_{-n}, \quad L^-_n \equiv -\bar{L}^+_{-n}, $
(11) which indeed satisfy the standard algebras (2) and (7), and conditions (5) and (8).
Finally, we get two copies of the
$\widehat{U(1)}$ algebra,$ [\alpha^\pm_n, \alpha^\pm_m] = n \delta_{n+m,0}, $
(12) which is the same as the algebra in Ref. [7] , except for the irrelevant factor
$1/2$ .With these algebras, one can construct the near-horizon symmetry algebra. Let us define
$ T_n = \alpha^+_n+\alpha^-_{-n},\quad Y_n = L^+_n-L^-_{-n}. $
(13) It is easy to show that these operators satisfy the near-horizon symmetry algebra [32]
$ \begin{split} \left[ {{T_m},{T_n}} \right] =& 0,\\ \left[ {{Y_m},{T_n}} \right] =& - n{T_{m + n}},\\ \left[ {{Y_m},{Y_n}} \right] =& (m - n){Y_{m + n}}, \end{split} $
(14) where
$T_n$ generates a super-translation, and$Y_n$ generates a super-rotation. -
In this section we discuss the representations of the algebra (12). According to the rules of the conformal field theory [33], these representations should be closed under the "fusion algebra". For
$\widehat{U(1)}$ , this just means addition of r. For$W = \widehat{U(1)}\otimes \widehat{\bar{U}(1)}$ , the highest-weight states can be written as$|r_1,r_2\rangle,r_1,r_2 \in R$ . The operators (13) acting on this state give$ T_0 |r_1,r_2\rangle = (r_1+r_2)|r_1,r_2\rangle,\quad Y_0 |r_1,r_2\rangle = \frac{r^2_1-r^2_2}{2}|r_1,r_2\rangle. $
(15) A general descendant can be written as
$ |\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle = \prod\limits_{n_i^\pm} (\alpha^+_{-n_i^+} \alpha^-_{-n_i^-})|r_1,r_2\rangle, \quad n^\pm_1\geqslant n^\pm_2 \geqslant \cdots \geqslant n^\pm_s>0. $
(16) The operators acting on these states give
$ \begin{split} T_0 |\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle =& (r_1+r_2) |\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle,\\ Y_0 |\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle =& \left(\frac{r^2_1-r^2_2}{2}+\sum n_i^+-\sum n_i^-\right) |\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle. \end{split}$
(17) The key problem is to choose which representations correspond to the BTZ black hole microstates. The metric of the BTZ black hole can be written as [34]
$ {\rm d}s^2 = -N^2 {\rm d}v^2+2 {\rm d}v {\rm d}r+r^2 ({\rm d}\varphi+N^\varphi {\rm d}v)^2, $
(18) where
$N^2 = -8 G M+\displaystyle\frac{r^2}{l^2}+\displaystyle\frac{16 G^2 J^2}{r^2}, N^\varphi = -\displaystyle\frac{4 G J}{r^2}$ .$M,J$ are the mass and the angular momentum of the BTZ black hole, respectively.Following the horizon fluff proposal, we make the following assumption: the BTZ black hole microstates correspond to the descendants of the absolute vacuum state
$|(r_1 = 0,r_2 = 0)\rangle$ . Thus, the BTZ black hole microstates can be written as [7]$ |B\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle = N\{n_i^\pm\} \prod\limits_{n_i^\pm}(\alpha^+_{-n_i^+} \alpha^-_{-n_i^-})|0,0\rangle, \quad n^\pm_1\geqslant n^\pm_2 \geqslant \cdots \geqslant n^\pm_s>0, $
(19) where
$N\{n_i^\pm\}$ is the normalization factor.It is useful to compare the above results with the quantum Hall fluid. For the quantum Hall fluid,
$T_0$ represents the electric charge and$Y_0$ the angular momentum of the quasi-particles. For black holes, the meaning of$T_0$ is unclear, but$Y_0$ still represents the angular momentum. Let us define another operator,$H = L^+_0+L^-_{0}$ , which is the dimensionless Hamiltonian. Then we can identify the BTZ black hole microstates with parameters$(M,J)$ with the descendants$|B\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle$ , which satisfy$\begin{split} \langle B'\{n_i^{'\pm}\}|Y_0|B\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle = &c J \delta_{B',B},\\ \langle B'\{n_i^{'\pm}\}|H|B\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle =& c M l \delta_{B',B}, \end{split}$
(20) where
$c = 3l/2G$ is the central charge [9]. Substituting (19) into (20) gives$ \sum n_i^+-\sum n_i^- = c J,\quad \sum n_i^++\sum n_i^- = c M l. $
(21) The solution is very simple,
$ \sum n_i^+ = c \frac{M l+J}{2}, \quad \sum n_i^- = c \frac{M l-J}{2}. $
(22) Different
$\{n_i^\pm\}$ correspond to different microstates of the BTZ black hole with the same$(M,J)$ . The total number of microstates for the BTZ black hole with parameters$(M,J)$ is given by the famous Hardy-Ramanujan formula [35],$ p(N)\simeq \frac{1}{4N \sqrt{3}}\exp \left(2 \pi \sqrt{\frac{N}{6}}\right). $
(23) The entropy of the BTZ black hole is given by the logarithm of the number of microstates
$|B\{n_i^\pm\}\rangle$ ,$ S = \ln p \left(c \frac{M l+J}{2}\right)+\ln p\left(c \frac{M l-J}{2}\right)+\cdots = \frac{2 \pi r_+}{4G}+\cdots, $
(24) which is just the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy with low order corrections.
The next question is what do the other highest-weight states
$|r_1,r_2\rangle,r_1,r_2 \in R$ mean. Let us turn back to the quantum Hall fluid. In the quantum Hall fluid, there are two kinds of excitations: the neutral excitations and the charged excitations, which correspond to quasi-holes and quasi-particles in the bulk of the fluid. For the integer quantum Hall effect, the highest-weight state is the vacuum state$|0\rangle$ . For the fractional quantum Hall effect, the other highest-weight states$|Q\rangle$ appear, which have fractional charges and statistics. In the corresponding case of black holes, the pure black hole could be associated with the absolute vacuum state$|0\rangle$ , and the black holes interacting with matter could correspond to the other highest-weight states.
W-hairs of the black holes in three-dimensional spacetime
- Received Date: 2019-04-22
- Accepted Date: 2019-07-11
- Available Online: 2019-09-01
Abstract: In a previous publication, we claimed that a black hole can be considered as a topological insulator. A direct consequence of this claim is that their symmetries should be related. In this paper, we give a representation of the near-horizon symmetry algebra of the BTZ black hole using the W1+∞ symmetry algebra of the topological insulator in three-dimensional spacetime. Based on the W1+∞ algebra, we count the number of the microstates of the BTZ black holes and obtain the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy.