Essential mathematical insights into one of the most important and
challenging open problems in general relativity-the stability of black
holes
One of the major outstanding questions about black holes is whether they
remain stable when subject to small perturbations. An affirmative answer
to this question would provide strong theoretical support for the
physical reality of black holes. In this book, Sergiu Klainerman and
Jérémie Szeftel take a first important step toward solving the
fundamental black hole stability problem in general relativity by
establishing the stability of nonrotating black holes-or Schwarzschild
spacetimes-under so-called polarized perturbations. This restriction
ensures that the final state of evolution is itself a Schwarzschild
space. Building on the remarkable advances made in the past fifteen
years in establishing quantitative linear stability, Klainerman and
Szeftel introduce a series of new ideas to deal with the strongly
nonlinear, covariant features of the Einstein equations. Most preeminent
among them is the general covariant modulation (GCM) procedure that
allows them to determine the center of mass frame and the mass of the
final black hole state. Essential reading for mathematicians and
physicists alike, this book introduces a rich theoretical framework
relevant to situations such as the full setting of the Kerr stability
conjecture.