Refined Thermodynamics of Black Holes with Proper Conserved Charges
Aydin Tavlayan, Bayram Tekin

TL;DR
This paper refines black hole thermodynamics by properly defining conserved charges across various gravity theories, revealing how these modifications influence thermodynamic laws and properties like volume and entropy.
Contribution
It introduces a background Killing charge method to accurately define mass and angular momentum in diverse gravity theories, impacting black hole thermodynamics understanding.
Findings
Adjusted thermodynamic laws for Kerr-AdS black holes in Einstein's theory.
Defined effective black hole volume without cosmological constant.
Showed how conserved charges influence black hole entropy and thermodynamics.
Abstract
Field equations of a classical, geometric, theory of gravity, augmented with some semiclassical considerations strongly suggest that the gravitational field representing a stationary black hole can be simply described with a few thermodynamical coordinates and their conjugates that obey the four laws of thermodynamics plus the Smarr formula and the reverse isoperimetric inequality that bounds the maximum entropy for a given effective volume of space. The thermodynamics of black holes is a promising window to the quantum nature of black holes; hence, it is important to understand all the details of these laws. The identification and the meaning of these thermodynamic coordinates depend on the gravity theory under consideration. For example, the existence of dimensionful coupling constants, such as the cosmological constant, changes the scaling properties of the theory, its solutions, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
