| Literature DB >> 30061720 |
Zhi-Wei Wang1,2, Samuel L Braunstein3.
Abstract
Since the 1970s, it has been known that black-hole (and other) horizons are truly thermodynamic. More generally, surfaces which are not horizons have also been conjectured to behave thermodynamically. Initially, for surfaces microscopically expanded from a horizon to so-called stretched horizons, and more recently, for more general ordinary surfaces in the emergent gravity program. To test these conjectures we ask whether such surfaces satisfy an analogue to the first law of thermodynamics (as do horizons). For static asymptotically flat spacetimes we find that such a first law holds on horizons. We prove that this law remains an excellent approximation for stretched horizons, but counter-intuitively this result illustrates the insufficiency of the laws of black-hole mechanics alone from implying truly thermodynamic behavior. For surfaces away from horizons in the emergent gravity program the first law fails (except for spherically symmetric scenarios), thus undermining the key thermodynamic assumption of this program.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30061720 PMCID: PMC6065406 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-05433-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Schematic of the spacelike three-dimensional hypersurface of interest, Σ, with an inner boundary ∂Σin and a boundary at infinity ∂Σ∞. Here is the spacelike four-vector normal to the boundaries of Σ (note the direction convention on the inner boundary). We assume a general mass distribution within the inner boundary and no matter outside it