Gravity and Nonequilibrium Thermodynamics of Classical Matter
B. L. Hu

TL;DR
This paper investigates the nonequilibrium thermodynamics of classical matter to understand features of gravity and black hole physics without quantum considerations, emphasizing gravity's emergent and nonextensive nature.
Contribution
It provides a classical nonequilibrium thermodynamics framework for gravity, highlighting properties like negative heat capacity and slow relaxation, without quantum or holographic assumptions.
Findings
Classical systems with gravity exhibit negative heat capacity.
Gravitational systems are nonextensive and relax slowly.
Many black hole thermodynamic features can be derived from classical nonequilibrium principles.
Abstract
Renewed interest in deriving gravity (more precisely, the Einstein equations) from thermodynamics considerations [1, 2] is stirred up by a recent proposal that 'gravity is an entropic force' [3] (see also [4]). Even though I find the arguments justifying such a claim in this latest proposal rather ad hoc and simplistic compared to the original one I would unreservedly support the call to explore deeper the relation between gravity and thermodynamics, this having the same spirit as my long-held view that general relativity is the hydrodynamic limit [5, 6] of some underlying theories for the microscopic structure of spacetime - all these proposals, together with that of [7, 8], attest to the emergent nature of gravity [9]. In this first paper of two we set the modest goal of studying the nonequilibrium thermodynamics of classical matter only, bringing afore some interesting prior results,…
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