4.2 Article

Black hole entropy contributions from Euclidean cores

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WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S0218271823420117

Keywords

Black hole thermodynamics; Euclidean path integral; nonsingular black holes

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The entropy of a Schwarzschild black hole is determined by the Gibbons-Hawking-York boundary term evaluated on a suitable hypersurface, not by the on-shell value of the action. The presence of a regular black hole core inside a Euclidean black hole affects the black hole entropy, but these contributions need to vanish identically for exact agreement with the area law and a self-consistent first law of black hole thermodynamics. This links the limiting curvature hypothesis to black hole thermodynamics.
The entropy of a Schwarzschild black hole, as computed via the semiclassical Euclidean path integral in a stationary phase approximation, is determined not by the on-shell value of the action (which vanishes), but by the Gibbons-Hawking-York boundary term evaluated on a suitable hypersurface, which can be chosen arbitrarily far away from the horizon. For this reason, the black hole singularity seemingly has no influence on the Bekenstein-Hawking area law. In this paper, we estimate how a regular black hole core, deep inside a Euclidean black hole of mass M and generated via a UV regulator length scale l > 0, affects the black hole entropy. The contributions are suppressed by factors of l/(2GM); demanding exact agreement with the area law as well as a self-consistent first law of black hole thermodynamics at all orders, however, demands that these contributions vanish identically via uniformly bounded curvature. This links the limiting curvature hypothesis to black hole thermodynamics.

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