Black hole entropy from entanglement: A review
Saurya Das (Lethbridge U.), S. Shankaranarayanan (Portsmouth U., ICG),, Sourav Sur (Lethbridge U.)

TL;DR
This review discusses how quantum entanglement of scalar fields near black hole horizons can explain black hole entropy, highlighting the area law, corrections for excited states, and effects of mass, in both flat and curved spacetimes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of entanglement entropy as a microscopic origin of black hole entropy, including corrections for excited states and the impact of mass.
Findings
Entanglement entropy follows the area law for ground states.
Excited states introduce power-law corrections to the area law.
Results are applicable in both flat and curved spacetime black hole models.
Abstract
We review aspects of the thermodynamics of black holes and in particular take into account the fact that the quantum entanglement between the degrees of freedom of a scalar field, traced inside the event horizon, can be the origin of black hole entropy. The main reason behind such a plausibility is that the well-known Bekenstein-Hawking entropy-area proportionality -- the so-called `area law' of black hole physics -- holds for entanglement entropy as well, provided the scalar field is in its ground state, or in other minimum uncertainty states, such as a generic coherent state or squeezed state. However, when the field is either in an excited state or in a state which is a superposition of ground and excited states, a power-law correction to the area law is shown to exist. Such a correction term falls off with increasing area, so that eventually the area law is recovered for large…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
