Firewalls as artefacts of inconsistent truncations of quantum geometries
Abstract
In this paper we argue that a firewall is simply a manifestation of an inconsistent truncation of non-perturbative effects that unitarize the semiclassical black hole. Namely, we show that a naive truncation of quantum corrections to the Hawking spectrum at order O(e-S), inexorably leads to a "localised'' divergent energy density near the black hole horizon. Nevertheless, in the same approximation, a distant observer only sees a discretised spectrum and concludes that unitarity is achieved by O(e-S) effects. This is due to the fact that instead, the correct quantum corrections to the Hawking spectrum go like O( gtt e-S). Therefore, while at a distance far away from the horizon, where gtt≈ 1, quantum corrections are perturbative, they do diverge close to the horizon, where gtt→ ∞. Nevertheless, these "corrections" nicely re-sum so that correlations functions are smooth at the would-be black hole horizon. Thus, we conclude that the appearance of firewalls is just a signal of the breaking of the semiclassical approximation at the Page time, even for large black holes.