4.7 Article

Energy stored on a cosmological horizon and its thermodynamic fluctuations in holographic equipartition law

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.105.043534

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This article explores the energy storage and thermodynamic fluctuations on the cosmic horizon. It establishes that a flat universe closely resembles a de Sitter universe and uses the holographic equipartition law to calculate the energy density on the Hubble horizon of a de Sitter universe. The findings suggest that the energy stored on the horizon is related to effective dark energy and the maximum storage energy behaves like effective vacuum-like energy. Additionally, the study examines thermodynamic fluctuations on the horizon and finds them to be a universal constant corresponding to the Planck energy.
Our Universe is expected to finally approach a de Sitter universe whose horizon is considered to be in thermal equilibrium. In the present article, both the energy stored on the horizon and its thermodynamic fluctuations are examined through the holographic equipartition law. First, it is confirmed that a flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe approaches a de Sitter universe, using a cosmological model close to lambda cold dark matter models. Then, based on the holographic equipartition law, the energy density of the Hubble volume is calculated from the energy on the Hubble horizon of a de Sitter universe. The energy density for a de Sitter universe is constant and the order of the energy density is consistent with the order of that for the observed cosmological constant. Second, thermodynamic fluctuations of energy on the horizon are examined, assuming stable fluctuations around thermal equilibrium states. A standard formulation of the fluctuations for a canonical ensemble is applied to the Hubble horizon of a de Sitter universe. The thermodynamic fluctuations of the energy are found to be a universal constant corresponding to the Planck energy, regardless of the Hubble parameter. In contrast, the relative fluctuations of the energy can be characterized by the ratio of the one-degree-of-freedom energy to the Planck energy. At the present time, the order of the relative fluctuations should be within the range of a discrepancy derived from a discussion of the cosmological constant problem, namely, a range approximately from 10-60 to 10-123. The present results may imply that the energy stored on the Hubble horizon is related to a kind of effective dark energy, whereas the energy that can be maximally stored on the horizon may behave as if it were a kind of effective vacuum-like energy in an extended holographic equipartition law.

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