The Structure of the Gravitational Action and its relation with Horizon Thermodynamics and Emergent Gravity Paradigm
Krishnamohan Parattu, Bibhas Ranjan Majhi, T. Padmanabhan

TL;DR
This paper explores the structure of the gravitational action, revealing its deep connections with horizon thermodynamics and emergent gravity, by introducing holographically conjugate variables and interpreting boundary variations thermodynamically.
Contribution
It introduces holographically conjugate variables for the Einstein-Hilbert action and links boundary variations to thermodynamic quantities, offering new insights into the emergent nature of gravity.
Findings
Surface term variation relates to TδS and SδT on null surfaces.
Certain variables simplify the gravitational field equations.
Provides a thermodynamic interpretation of boundary conditions.
Abstract
If gravity is an emergent phenomenon, as suggested by several recent results, then the structure of the action principle for gravity should encode this fact. With this motivation we study several features of the Einstein-Hilbert action and establish direct connections with horizon thermodynamics. We begin by introducing the concept of holographically conjugate variables (HCVs) in terms of which the surface term in the action has a specific relationship with the bulk term. In addition to g_{ab} and its conjugate momentum \sqrt{-g} M^{cab}, this procedure allows us to (re)discover and motivate strongly the use of f^{ab}=\sqrt{-g}g^{ab} and its conjugate momentum N^c_{ab}. The gravitational action can then be interpreted as a momentum space action for these variables. We also show that many expressions in classical gravity simplify considerably in this approach. For example, the field…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
