Numerical simulation of type II primordial black hole formation
Koichiro Uehara, Albert Escrivà, Tomohiro Harada, Daiki Saito, Chul‐Moon Yoo
Abstract
Abstract This study investigates the formation of primordial black holes (PBHs) resulting from extremely large amplitudes of initial fluctuations in a radiation-dominated universe. We find that, for a sufficiently large initial amplitude, the configuration of trapping horizons shows characteristic structure due to the existence of bifurcating trapping horizons. We call this type of configuration of the trapping horizons type B PBH, while the structure without a bifurcating trapping horizon type A PBH. As shown in ref. [1], in the matter-dominated universe, the type B PBH can be realized by the type II initial fluctuation, which is characterized by a non-monotonic areal radius as a function of the radial coordinate (throat structure) in contrast with the standard case, type A PBH with a monotonic areal radius (type I fluctuation). Our research reveals that a type II fluctuation does not necessarily result in a type B PBH in the radiation-dominated case. We also find that for an initial amplitude well above the threshold value, the resulting PBH mass may either increase or decrease with increasing the initial amplitude, depending on its specific profile rather than its fluctuation type.