Liquid bridges and black strings in higher dimensions
Abstract
Analyzing a capillary minimizing problem for a higher-dimensional extended fluid, we find that there exist startling similarities between the black hole-black string system (the Gregory-Laflamme instability) and the liquid drop-liquid bridge system (the Rayleigh-Plateau instability), which were first suggested by a perturbative approach. In the extended fluid system, we confirm the existence of the critical dimension above which the non-uniform bridge (NUB, i.e., {\it Delaunay unduloid}) serves as the global minimizer of surface area. We also find a variety of phase structures (one or two cusps in the volume-area phase diagram) near the critical dimension. Applying a catastrophe theory, we predict that in the 9 dimensional (9D) space and below, we have the first order transition from a uniform bridge (UB) to a spherical drop (SD), while in the 10D space and above, we expect the transition such that UB NUB SD. This gives an important indication for a transition in the black hole-black string system.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0803.3037,
title = {Liquid bridges and black strings in higher dimensions},
author = {Umpei Miyamoto and Kei-ichi Maeda},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0803.3037},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; v2 reference added