Properties of Rindler Horizon and Some Aspects of Black Hole Chemistry in Massive Gravity
Date
2023
Authors
T K, Safir
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute Of Technology Karnataka Surathkal
Abstract
One of the biggest challenges in theoretical physics, beyond any doubt, is the lack
of a successful theory that describes how gravity works quantum mechanically. Ex-
ploring black holes provides many promising pathways that might lead us to a positive
solution for the problem at hand. One of the tools in this regard is the thermodynamic
behavior of black holes. To this extent, this thesis deals with certain aspects of black
hole thermodynamics. First, we probe the microstructure of the dRGT massive black
hole in an anti-de Sitter background. The calculations are performed in an extended
phase space with pressure and volume taken as fluctuation variables. We analyze the
microstructure by exploiting the Ruppeiner geometry, where the thermodynamic cur-
vature scalar is constructed via adiabatic compressibility. The nature of the curvature
scalar along the coexistence line of small (SBH) and large (LBH) black holes is inves-
tigated. In the microscopic interaction, we observe that the SBH phase behaves as an
anyonic gas and the LBH phase is analogous to a boson gas. Further, we study the effect
of graviton mass on the underlying microstructure of the black hole.
The thermodynamic study in the massive gravity theory can be extended further by
considering the dynamics of phase transition. The dynamical properties of the stable
small-large black hole phase transitions in dRGT non-linear massive gravity theory are
studied based on the underlying free energy landscape. The free energy landscape is
constructed by specifying the Gibbs free energy to every state, and the free energy
profile is used to study the different black hole phases. The small-large black hole
states are characterized by a probability distribution function, and the kinetics of phase
transition is described by the Fokker-Planck equation. Further, a detailed study of the
first passage process is presented, which describes the dynamics of phase transition. We
have investigated the effect of mass and topology on the dynamical properties of phase
transitions of black holes in dRGT massive gravity theory.
Finally, we concentrate on the characteristics and features of the first law of black
hole thermodynamics. The physical process version of the first law can be obtained
for bifurcate-Killing horizons with certain assumptions. Especially, one has to restrict
to the situations where the horizon evolution is quasi-stationary, under perturbations.We revisit the analysis of this assumption considering the horizon perturbations of the
Rindler horizon by a spherically symmetric object. We demonstrate that even if the
quasi-stationary assumption holds, the change in entropy in four-dimensional space-
time dimensions diverges when considered between asymptotic cross-sections. How-
ever, these divergences do not appear in higher dimensions. We also analyze these fea-
tures in the presence of a positive cosmological constant. In the process, we prescribe a
recipe to establish the physical process first law in such ill-behaved scenarios.
Description
Keywords
Black hole thermodynamics, Thermodynamic geometry, Massive gravity theory, Free energy landscape