2,832 research outputs found
A Covariant Entropy Conjecture
We conjecture the following entropy bound to be valid in all space-times
admitted by Einstein's equation: Let A be the area of any two-dimensional
surface. Let L be a hypersurface generated by surface-orthogonal null geodesics
with non-positive expansion. Let S be the entropy on L. Then S does not exceed
A/4.
We present evidence that the bound can be saturated, but not exceeded, in
cosmological solutions and in the interior of black holes. For systems with
limited self-gravity it reduces to Bekenstein's bound. Because the conjecture
is manifestly time reversal invariant, its origin cannot be thermodynamic, but
must be statistical. Thus it places a fundamental limit on the number of
degrees of freedom in nature.Comment: 41 pages, 7 figures. v2,v3: references adde
Holographic probabilities in eternal inflation
In the global description of eternal inflation, probabilities for vacua are
notoriously ambiguous. The local point of view is preferred by holography and
naturally picks out a simple probability measure. It is insensitive to large
expansion factors or lifetimes, and so resolves a recently noted paradox. Any
cosmological measure must be complemented with the probability for observers to
emerge in a given vacuum. In lieu of anthropic criteria, I propose to estimate
this by the entropy that can be produced in a local patch. This allows for
prior-free predictions.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. v4: published version, misprints corrected (mu ->
eta
Complementarity Is Not Enough
The near-horizon field B of an old black hole is maximally entangled with the
early Hawking radiation R, by unitarity of the S-matrix. But B must be
maximally entangled with the black hole interior A, by the equivalence
principle. Causal patch complementarity fails to reconcile these conflicting
requirements. The system B can be probed by a freely falling observer while
there is still time to turn around and remain outside the black hole.
Therefore, the entangled state of the BR system is dictated by unitarity even
in the infalling patch. If, by monogamy of entanglement, B is not entangled
with A, the horizon is replaced by a singularity or "firewall".
To illustrate the radical nature of the ideas that are needed, I briefly
discuss two approaches for avoiding a firewall: the identification of A with a
subsystem of R; and a combination of patch complementarity with the
Horowitz-Maldacena final-state proposal.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure. v2: Completely rewritte
Holography in General Space-times
We provide a background-independent formulation of the holographic principle.
It permits the construction of embedded hypersurfaces (screens) on which the
entire bulk information can be stored at a density of no more than one bit per
Planck area. Screens are constructed explicitly for AdS, Minkowski, and de
Sitter spaces with and without black holes, and for cosmological solutions. The
properties of screens provide clues about the character of a manifestly
holographic theory.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures. v2: references adde
The Holographic Principle for General Backgrounds
We aim to establish the holographic principle as a universal law, rather than
a property only of static systems and special space-times. Our covariant
formalism yields an upper bound on entropy which applies to both open and
closed surfaces, independently of shape or location. It reduces to the
Bekenstein bound whenever the latter is expected to hold, but complements it
with novel bounds when gravity dominates. In particular, it remains valid in
closed FRW cosmologies and in the interior of black holes. We give an explicit
construction for obtaining holographic screens in arbitrary space-times (which
need not have a boundary). This may aid the search for non-perturbative
definitions of quantum gravity in space-times other than AdS.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. Based on a talk given at Strings '99. Includes a
reply to recent criticism. For more details, examples, and references, see
hep-th/9905177 and hep-th/990602
Predicting the Cosmological Constant from the Causal Entropic Principle
We compute the expected value of the cosmological constant in our universe
from the Causal Entropic Principle. Since observers must obey the laws of
thermodynamics and causality, the principle asserts that physical parameters
are most likely to be found in the range of values for which the total entropy
production within a causally connected region is maximized. Despite the absence
of more explicit anthropic criteria, the resulting probability distribution
turns out to be in excellent agreement with observation. In particular, we find
that dust heated by stars dominates the entropy production, demonstrating the
remarkable power of this thermodynamic selection criterion. The alternative
approach - weighting by the number of "observers per baryon" - is less
well-defined, requires problematic assumptions about the nature of observers,
and yet prefers values larger than present experimental bounds.Comment: 38 pages, 9 figures, minor correction in Figure
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