The project progressed extremely well, realizing all its objectives. It led to 105 publications, of which 82 have already appeared in refereed journals. All of the publications are available on open-access servers.
We organized and held ten very successful Conferences/Workshops:
Black-Hole Microstructure Workshop – May 27-31, 2019
Black-Hole Microstructure Conference I - June 8-12, 2020 (23 speakers, 285 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Conference II - December 9-11, 2020 (17 speakers, 120 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Conference III - June 7-11, 2021 (20 speakers, 259 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Conference IV - June 6-10, 2022 (20 speakers, 138 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Workshop IV - June 13-17, 2022 (40 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Conference V - June 5-9, 2023 (20 speakers, 74 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Workshop V - June 12-16, 2023 (40 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Conference VI - June 10-14, 2024 (20 speakers, 89 participants)
Black-Hole Microstructure Workshop VI - June 17-21, 2024 (40 participants)
All the conference talks are freely available on YouTube.
We also organized three training programs/lecture courses for students, post-docs and researchers:
Lectures on Microstate Geometries: 4 x 2 hours of lectures with recordings and lecture notes. Given by Warner in May 2019
Lectures on Superstrata Construction: 4 x 2 hours of lectures with recordings and lecture notes. Given by Warner in October/November 2020
Virtual Workshop on Black-Hole Information conducted by Samir Mathur: 5 x 2 hours of lectures and discussions; May, 2021
Members of the QBHStructure team have given many plenary conference talks. Bena, Mayerson and Warner attended, and have given talks at meetings with members of the LIGO, LISA and EHT collaborations. We have developed dialogues about possible observable signatures of microstate structure. This initiative was greatly advanced in the six Black-Hole Microstructure conferences at which 20% of the time was dedicated to exploring how microstructure might give rise to observational signatures. The project led to multiple publications that calculated and explored how microstructure might ultimately be detected.
Warner did several public outreach activities on black holes and black-hole microstructure, ranging from interviews on YouTube to being a science consultant for NOVA, Universe Revealed: Black Holes.