English

The Physical Process First Law for Bifurcate Killing Horizons

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2008-11-26 v2 High Energy Physics - Theory

Abstract

The physical process version of the first law for black holes states that the passage of energy and angular momentum through the horizon results in a change in area κ8πΔA=ΔEΩΔJ\frac{\kappa}{8 \pi} \Delta A = \Delta E - \Omega \Delta J, so long as this passage is quasi-stationary. A similar physical process first law can be derived for any bifurcate Killing horizon in any spacetime dimension d3d \ge 3 using much the same argument. However, to make this law non-trivial, one must show that sufficiently quasi-stationary processes do in fact occur. In particular, one must show that processes exist for which the shear and expansion remain small, and in which no new generators are added to the horizon. Thorne, MacDonald, and Price considered related issues when an object falls across a d=4 black hole horizon. By generalizing their argument to arbitrary d3d \ge 3 and to any bifurcate Killing horizon, we derive a condition under which these effects are controlled and the first law applies. In particular, by providing a non-trivial first law for Rindler horizons, our work completes the parallel between the mechanics of such horizons and those of black holes for d3d \ge 3. We also comment on the situation for d=2.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0708.2738,
  title  = {The Physical Process First Law for Bifurcate Killing Horizons},
  author = {Aaron J. Amsel and Donald Marolf and Amitabh Virmani},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0708.2738},
  year   = {2008}
}

Comments

19 pages; v2: ref added, minor changes

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:09:06.578Z