Bekenstein's generalized second law of thermodynamics: The role of the hoop conjecture
Shahar Hod

TL;DR
This paper re-examines Bekenstein's thought experiment challenging the generalized second law of thermodynamics for black holes, proposing a generalized hoop conjecture to ensure the law's validity near extremal conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized hoop conjecture to demonstrate that a larger horizon forms before the box reaches the black hole, preserving the GSL in near-extremal cases.
Findings
A new horizon forms before the box reaches the original horizon.
The generalized hoop conjecture resolves the apparent GSL violation.
The GSL remains valid under the proposed conditions.
Abstract
Bekenstein's generalized second law (GSL) of thermodynamics asserts that the sum of black-hole entropy, (here is the black-hole surface area), and the ordinary entropy of matter and radiation fields in the black-hole exterior region never decreases. We here re-analyze an intriguing gedanken experiment which was designed by Bekenstein to challenge the GSL. In this historical gedanken experiment an entropy-bearing box is lowered into a charged Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole. For the GSL to work, the resulting increase in the black-hole surface area (entropy) must compensate for the loss of the box's entropy. We show that if the box can be lowered adiabatically all the way down to the black-hole horizon, as previously assumed in the literature, then for near-extremal black holes the resulting increase in black-hole surface-area (due to the assimilation of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
