Quantum Capacity and Vacuum Compressibility of Spacetime: Thermal Fields
Hing-Tong Cho, Jen-Tsung Hsiang, Bei-Lok Hu

TL;DR
This paper investigates the thermodynamic properties of quantum fields in various spacetime geometries to understand vacuum fluctuations and stability, using heat capacity and compressibility as key indicators.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum thermodynamics framework to analyze vacuum fluctuations and stability in different spacetime models, extending previous correlator-based approaches.
Findings
Vacuum energy fluctuations approach unity in certain geometries.
Thermodynamic stability depends on spacetime dimensionality.
Compatibility conditions for quantum fields and spacetimes are qualitatively assessed.
Abstract
An important yet perplexing result from work in the 90s and 00s is the near-unity value of the ratio of fluctuations in the vacuum energy density of quantum fields to the mean in a collection of generic spacetimes. This was done by way of calculating the noise kernels which are the correlators of the stress-energy tensor of quantum fields. In this paper we revisit this issue via a quantum thermodynamics approach, by calculating two quintessential thermodynamic quantities: the heat capacity and the quantum compressibility of some model geometries filled with a quantum field at high and low temperatures. This is because heat capacity at constant volume gives a measure of the fluctuations of the energy density to the mean. When this ratio approaches or exceeds unity, the validity of the canonical distribution is called into question. Likewise, a system's compressibility at constant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
