Thermal equilibrium states of a linear scalar quantum field in stationary spacetimes
Ko Sanders

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theory of thermal equilibrium states of a linear scalar quantum field in stationary spacetimes, emphasizing existence, uniqueness, and properties of KMS states, especially in black hole contexts, with weakened technical assumptions.
Contribution
It provides a unified exposition on KMS states in stationary spacetimes, relaxing previous technical assumptions and analyzing their implications for black hole physics.
Findings
Existence of unique ground and KMS states established.
Analysis of temperature behavior with respect to locality highlighted.
Explicit treatment of Gibbs states and Wick rotation for static spacetimes.
Abstract
The linear scalar quantum field, propagating in a globally hyperbolic spacetime, is a relatively simple physical model that allows us to study many aspects in explicit detail. In this review we focus on the theory of thermal equilibrium (KMS) states of such a field in a stationary spacetime. Our presentation draws on several existing sources and aims to give a unified exposition. We also take the opportunity to weaken some of the technical assumptions of the earlier literature. In particular, we completely drop any assumptions on the behaviour of the norm and lapse of the Killing field. This is especially important for physical applications to the exterior region of a stationary black hole. Our review includes results on the existence of a unique ground state and of unique quasi-free KMS states, as well as an evaluation of the evidence that motivates the use of the KMS-condition to…
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