Submitted:
02 December 2025
Posted:
03 December 2025
Read the latest preprint version here
Abstract

Keywords:
1. Introduction
Scope and structure of this work.
2. Bounded Vacuum and the QCD Scale
2.1 Physical Bounds from QCD
2.2 Finite Vacuum Spectrum
2.3 Application to Black-Hole Interiors
3. Black-Hole Interiors and the Information Horizon
3.1. Bounded Temperature and Internal Thermodynamics
3.2. Growth of the Information Horizon
3.3. Absence of Singularities
Softening and possible violation of the Strong Energy Condition.
Implications for geodesic focusing.
A simple constant-density QCD core.
3.4. Black Holes as Thermodynamic, Information-Preserving Systems
3.5. Relation to Other Black–Hole Interior Models

Gravastars.
Quark stars and related compact objects.
String-theoretic microstate/fuzzball models.
3.6. Physical Energy Mechanism of Black Hole Existence
3.6.1. Bounded Vacuum Energy as Enabling Condition
3.6.2. QCD Thermodynamics as Stabilising Mechanism
3.6.3. Mass Gain and Mass Loss
3.6.4. Cooling Below the QCD Scale and End-of-Life Behaviour

4. Related Work
5. Discussion, Limitations and Outlook
5.1. Discussion and Limitations
5.2. Outlook – Testable Consequences
Horizon-scale signatures and black-hole shadows
QGP-driven emission at low accretion rates
Jet formation and rotational energy extraction
Late-time phase transition and galactic-scale imprints
6. Conclusions
Appendix A. Derivation of the Bounded Vacuum Spectrum
Clarification onthe notation Emin.
Appendix A.1. Upper Bound: Confinement and QCD Deconfinement Scale
Appendix A.2. Lower Bound: Thermal Freeze–out of Hadronic Modes
Appendix A.3. Finite Spectral Interval
Appendix A.4. Physical Interpretation
- The vacuum cannot excite modes of arbitrarily short wavelength because QCD forbids unconfined colored states.
- The vacuum cannot excite arbitrarily low-energy hadronic modes because they thermally freeze out.
- The vacuum energy density is therefore not ultraviolet-divergent but finite.
- Additional energy injected into the vacuum near the QCD scale increases the number of internal degrees of freedom, not the frequency of vacuum modes.
- In gravitational collapse, this spectral boundedness enforces a maximum internal temperature and prevents singularity formation.
Appendix B. Thermodynamics of the Quark–Gluon Plasma
Appendix B.1. Equation of State
Appendix B.2. Hagedorn Behavior and Limiting Temperature
Appendix B.3. Strongly Interacting Regime
Appendix B.4. QGP Thermodynamics and the QEV Model
- 1.
- **Limiting temperature:** For strongly interacting QCD matter there exists an effective limiting temperature,in the sense that additional energy near this scale predominantly increases entropy and particle multiplicity rather than raising the temperature.
- 2.
- **Entropy-dominated evolution:** Additional energy contributes to entropy production rather than raising the temperature,
- 3.
- **Finite maximum energy density:** The QCD equation of state enforces a maximal energy density,preventing divergent behavior.
- 4.
- **Absence of singularities:** Since neither energy density nor temperature diverges, spacetime curvature remains finite inside gravitationally collapsed objects composed of QCD matter.
- 5.
- **Horizon growth governed by QCD:** Entropy production in the core leads to growth of the horizon area,consistent with the Bekenstein–Hawking relation.
Appendix B.5. Implications for Black–Hole Interiors
Appendix C. Information Horizon, Holography, and the Status of the Planck Scale
Appendix C.1. The Information Horizon
Appendix C.2. Holographic Interpretation
- 1.
- The QCD–bounded vacuum enforces a maximal energy density and a maximal temperature.
- 2.
- Additional internal energy produces additional microscopic degrees of freedom in the QGP core.
- 3.
- This increase in S demands an increase in horizon area A, consistent with holographic scaling.
Appendix C.3. The Planck Scale as a Theoretical Benchmark
Appendix C.4. QCD Scale and Planck Scale
- 1.
- The effective upper bound on vacuum excitations in the present model is the confinement energy,not the Planck energy .
- 2.
- The maximum temperature reached by strongly interacting matter is set by the QCD (Hagedorn–like) temperature,far below the Planck temperature.
- 3.
- The corresponding maximum energy densities are of orderagain many orders of magnitude below the Planck density.
Appendix C.5. Consequences for Non–Singular Black Holes
Appendix D. Comparison of the QEV Framework with QFT Cutoffs, Holographic Models, and Loop Quantum Cosmology
Appendix D.1. QEV Versus Conventional QFT Ultraviolet Cutoffs
- 1.
- The cutoff is arbitrary. There is no physical principle that selects a particular .
- 2.
- No experimental signature exists at the cutoff scale.
- 3.
- Cutoffs break Lorentz invariance unless implemented with great care.
- 4.
- The cosmological constant is still far too large unless fine-tuning of 120 orders of magnitude is applied.
Appendix D.2. QEV Versus Holographic Duality (AdS/CFT)
- AdS/CFT applies strictly to anti-de Sitter spacetime, not to flat or de Sitter spacetime.
- It does not provide a physical mechanism for singularity resolution inside realistic black holes.
- It does not offer a finite vacuum spectrum or a physical vacuum cutoff.
- It operates at the Planck scale, which has no direct experimental underpinning.
- 1.
- Holographic scaling arises dynamically fromwithout assuming AdS/CFT duality.
- 2.
- The microscopic degrees of freedom are QCD excitations, not hypothetical Planck-scale constituents.
- 3.
- Holography is a thermodynamic consequence of a QCD-bounded interior, not a quantum-gravitational duality postulate.
- 4.
- The model applies directly to astrophysical black holes in our universe.
Appendix D.3. QEV Versus Loop Quantum Cosmology (LQC)
- a quantized geometry with discrete volume operators;
- curvature scalars bounded by the Planck density;
- a big bounce instead of a big bang singularity.
- The Planck scale is assumed to be physically fundamental, yet unmeasured.
- Black-hole interiors are highly model-dependent and still debated.
- The degrees of freedom are quantized geometry, not experimentally observed matter fields.
- 1.
- uses experimentally verified QCD physics rather than Planck-scale geometry;
- 2.
- derives singularity avoidance from the QGP equation of state:
- 3.
- replaces the singularity with a thermodynamic core of finite entropy;
- 4.
- avoids introducing discrete spacetime or untested quantum gravity assumptions.
Summary of Key Distinctions
| Feature | QEV | QFT cutoff | AdS/CFT | LQC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vacuum bound | QCD scale | Arbitrary | None | Planck scale |
| Singularity removal | Yes (QCD EOS) | No | No | Yes (bounce) |
| Holography | Thermodynamic | No | Built-in duality | Partial |
| Experiment support | Yes | No | No | No |
| Planck scale needed | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Max. temperature | Hagedorn | None | Planck | Planck |
- the vacuum spectrum is bounded by experimentally established physics;
- singularities are avoided without invoking Planck-scale quantization;
- holography arises dynamically from thermodynamics rather than dualities.
Appendix E. Bounded Vacuum, Spectral Projection and a Constant-Density Core
Appendix E.1. Bounded Vacuum as a Spectral Projection
Appendix E.2. Thermodynamics with a Bounded Spectrum
Appendix E.3. Semiclassical Gravity and Bounded Curvature
Appendix E.4. Order-of-Magnitude Estimates for a QCD-Bounded Core
Appendix E.5. Constant-Density QCD Core: Technical Derivation
Appendix F. Constant-Density QCD Core as a Nonsingular Interior
Appendix F.1. QCD-Scale Energy Density
Appendix F.2. Constant–Density TOV Model
Appendix F.3. Finite Curvature: Absence of a Singularity
Appendix F.4. Matching to the Exterior Black–Hole Geometry
Appendix F.5. Interpretation
- A finite QCD energy density naturally removes the black–hole singularity: the interior is described by a smooth constant–density QGP core instead of a curvature divergence.
- The resulting curvature is small and physically acceptable, without the need for exotic matter or Planck–scale physics.
- The core mass is only a small fraction of the total black–hole mass, so that the exterior geometry at observable radii is well approximated by the usual Schwarzschild (or Kerr) solution.
- Such a core fits naturally into the QEV framework, in which vacuum fluctuations are bounded by QCD at short distances and the ultraviolet behaviour of gravitational collapse is regulated by known strong–interaction physics.
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| 1 | The notation refers in this paper to the QCD-scale thermal freeze-out threshold for hadronic degrees of freedom. This should not be confused with the much lower cosmological infrared bound denoted by the same symbol in [17,18], where the focus was on the low-energy sector of the QEV framework. In the present high-energy context one may read this as . |
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