

] within EM-dilaton theory.
The fact that the Gibbons solution carries no dilatonic charge
makes it asymptotically indistinguishable from a
Reissner-Nordström black hole with the same mass and electric
charge. However, since the latter is not a consistent solution of
the EM-dilaton equations, one might expect that - within a
given
matter model - the stationary black hole solutions are still
characterized by a set of global charges (generalized no-hair
conjecture). In fact, the Gibbons black hole supports the
generalized no-hair conjecture; its uniqueness within EM-dilaton
theory was established by Masood-ul-Alam in 1992 [130].
However, neither the original nor the generalized no-hair
conjecture are correct. For instance, the latter fails to be
valid within Einstein-Yang-Mills (EYM) theory: According to the
generalized version, any static solution of the EYM equations
should either coincide with the Schwarzschild metric or have some
non-vanishing Yang-Mills charges. This turned out not to be the
case, when, in 1989, various authors [174
], [122
], [8
] found a family of static black hole solutions with vanishing
Yang-Mills charges.
Since these solutions are asymptotically indistinguishable from
the Schwarzschild solution, and since the latter
is
a particular solution of the EYM equations, the non-Abelian
black holes violate the generalized no-hair conjecture.
As the non-Abelian black holes are not stable [166], [186
] [179],
one might adopt the view that they do not present actual threats
to the generalized no-hair conjecture. However, during the last
years, various authors have found stable black holes which are
not characterized by a set of asymptotic flux integrals: For
instance, there exist stable black hole solutions with hair to
the static, spherically symmetric Einstein-Skyrme equations [50], [92], [93], [97] and to the EYM equations coupled to a Higgs triplet [11
], [13
], [180
], [1
].
Hence, the restriction of the generalized no-hair conjecture to
stable configurations is not correct either.
One of the reasons why it was not until 1989 that black hole solutions with self-gravitating gauge fields were discovered was the widespread belief that the EYM equations admit no soliton solutions. There were, at least, four reasons in support of this hypothesis.
].)

|
Stationary Black Holes: Uniqueness and Beyond
Markus Heusler http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-1998-6 © Max-Planck-Gesellschaft. ISSN 1433-8351 Problems/Comments to livrev@aei-potsdam.mpg.de |