Event horizon - Magnifying glass for Planck length physics
T. Padmanabhan

TL;DR
This paper proposes that event horizons act as magnifying glasses for Planck-scale physics, suggesting a universal density of states for blackholes and modeling them as excitations in nonlocal field theories with specific dispersion relations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel perspective on blackhole thermodynamics, proposing a universal density of states and a modified Hamiltonian to describe blackhole formation from low-energy systems.
Findings
Blackholes have a universal density of states.
Blackholes can be modeled as excitations in nonlocal field theories.
Event horizons magnify Planck-scale physics even in low curvature regimes.
Abstract
An attempt is made to describe the `thermodynamics' of semiclassical spacetime without specifying the detailed `molecular structure' of the quantum spacetime, using the known properties of blackholes. I give detailed arguments, essentially based on the behaviour of quantum systems near the event horizon, which suggest that event horizon acts as a magnifying glass to probe Planck length physics even in those contexts in which the spacetime curvature is arbitrarily low. The quantum state describing a blackhole, in any microscopic description of spacetime, has to possess certain universal form of density of states which can be ascertained from general considerations. Since a blackhole can be formed from the collapse of any physical system with a low energy Hamiltonian H, it is suggested that when such a system collapses to form a blackhole, it should be described by a modified Hamiltonian…
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