Apparent horizon and gravitational thermodynamics of the Universe: Solutions to the temperature and entropy confusions, and extensions to modified gravity
David Wenjie Tian, Ivan Booth

TL;DR
This paper reexamines the thermodynamics of the Universe, clarifies the temperature and entropy issues of apparent horizons, and extends the framework to modified gravity theories, emphasizing the importance of the Cai-Kim temperature.
Contribution
It proposes a consistent thermodynamic framework for the Universe's horizons, resolves existing confusions, and extends the analysis to modified gravity models.
Findings
The Universe's entropy evolution depends on the equation of state parameter.
The second laws hold under specific conditions for matter content.
Cai-Kim temperature is more appropriate than Hayward's for horizon thermodynamics.
Abstract
The thermodynamics of the Universe is restudied by requiring its compatibility with the holographic-style gravitational equations which govern the dynamics of both the cosmological apparent horizon and the entire Universe, and possible solutions are proposed to the existent confusions regarding the apparent-horizon temperature and the cosmic entropy evolution. We start from the generic Lambda Cold Dark Matter (CDM) cosmology of general relativity (GR) to establish a framework for the gravitational thermodynamics. The Cai-Kim Clausius equation for the isochoric process of an instantaneous apparent horizon indicates that, the Universe and its horizon entropies encode the \emph{positive heat out} thermodynamic sign convention, which encourages us to adjust the traditional positive-heat-in Gibbs equation into the positive-heat-out version . It turns out that…
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