479 research outputs found
Box of Ideal Gas in Free Fall
We study the \textit{quantum} partition function of non-relativistic, ideal
gas in a (non-cubical) box falling freely in arbitrary curved spacetime with
centre 4-velocity u^a. When perturbed energy eigenvalues are properly taken
into account, we find that corrections to various thermodynamic quantities
include a very specific, sub-dominant term which is independent of
\textit{kinematic} details such as box dimensions and mass of particles. This
term is characterized by the dimensionless quantity, \Xi=R_00 \Lambda^2, where
R_00=R_ab u^a u^b and \Lambda=\beta \hbar c, and, quite intriguingly, produces
Euler relation of homogeneity two between entropy and energy -- a relation
familiar from black hole thermodynamics.Comment: 5 pages, no figures; abstract abridged and an appendix added
outlining some relevant mathematical steps; accepted in Phys. Lett.
Entropy density of spacetime from the zero point length
It is possible to obtain the gravitational field equations in a large class
of theories from a thermodynamic variational principle which uses the
gravitational heat density associated with null surfaces. This
heat density is related to the discreteness of spacetime at Planck scale,
, which assigns degrees of freedom to
any area . On the other hand, it is also known that the surface term
in the gravitational action principle correctly reproduces the heat
density of the null surfaces. We provide a link between these ideas by
obtaining , used in emergent gravity paradigm, from the surface
term in the action in Einstein's gravity. This is done using the notion of a
nonlocal qmetric -- introduced recently [arXiv:1307.5618, arXiv:1405.4967] --
which allows us to study the effects of zero-point-length of spacetime at the
transition scale between quantum and classical gravity. Computing
for the qmetric in the appropriate limit directly reproduces the entropy
density used in the emergent gravity paradigm.Comment: 8 pages; no figure
Hawking radiation as tunneling for spherically symmetric black holes: A generalized treatment
We present a derivation of Hawking radiation through tunneling mechanism for
a general class of asymptotically flat, spherically symmetric spacetimes. The
tunneling rate arises as a consequence of the
first law of thermodynamics, TdS=dE + PdV. Therefore, this approach
demonstrates how tunneling is intimately connected with the first law of
thermodynamics through the principle of conservation of energy. The analysis is
also generally applicable to any reasonable theory of gravity so long as the
first law of thermodynamics for horizons holds in the form, TdS=dE + PdV.Comment: RevTeX 4; 11 pages; no figure
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