Gravity can significantly modify classical and quantum Poincare recurrence theorems
Ruifeng Dong, Dejan Stojkovic

TL;DR
This paper explores how gravity, through black hole formation, can alter the classical and quantum Poincare recurrence theorems, affecting recurrence times and entropy in finite systems.
Contribution
It derives conditions under which black hole formation influences Poincare recurrence times and entropy, integrating gravity effects into classical and quantum recurrence theorems.
Findings
Classical black hole formation can quench Poincare recurrence.
Quantum black holes can alter recurrence times based on temperature.
Black hole mergers can extend recurrence times by increasing entropy.
Abstract
Poincare recurrence theorem states that any finite system will come arbitrary close to its initial state after some very long but finite time. At the statistical level, this by itself does not represent a paradox, but apparently violates the second law of thermodynamics, which may lead to some confusing conclusions for macroscopic systems. However, this statement does not take gravity into account. If two particles with a given center of mass energy come at the distance shorter than the Schwarzschild diameter apart, according to classical gravity they will form a black hole. In the classical case, a black hole once formed will always grow and effectively quench the Poincare recurrence. We derive the condition under which the classical black hole production rate is higher than the classical Poincare recurrence rate. In the quantum case, if the temperature of the black hole is lower than…
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