Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?

Abstract We study a critical limit in which asymptotically-AdS black holes develop maximal conical deficits and their horizons become non-compact. When applied to stationary rotating black holes this limit coincides with the “ultraspinning limit” and yields the Superentropic black holes whose entrop...

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Main Authors: Michael Appels, Leopoldo Cuspinera, Ruth Gregory, Pavel Krtouš, David Kubizňák
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-02-01
Series:Journal of High Energy Physics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/JHEP02(2020)195
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spelling doaj-7eb73817016c44e8b8adfe19e3fadb492020-11-25T00:28:45ZengSpringerOpenJournal of High Energy Physics1029-84792020-02-012020212410.1007/JHEP02(2020)195Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?Michael Appels0Leopoldo Cuspinera1Ruth Gregory2Pavel Krtouš3David Kubizňák4Centre for Particle Theory, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Durham UniversityInstitute for Particle Physics Phenomenology, Department of Physics, Durham UniversityCentre for Particle Theory, Department of Mathematical Sciences, Durham UniversityInstitute of Theoretical Physics, Charles UniversityPerimeter Institute for Theoretical PhysicsAbstract We study a critical limit in which asymptotically-AdS black holes develop maximal conical deficits and their horizons become non-compact. When applied to stationary rotating black holes this limit coincides with the “ultraspinning limit” and yields the Superentropic black holes whose entropy was derived recently and found to exceed the maximal possible bound imposed by the Reverse Isoperimetric Inequality [1, 2]. To gain more insight into this peculiar result, we study this limit in the context of accelerated AdS black holes that have unequal deficits along the polar axes, hence the maximal deficit need not appear on both poles simultaneously. Surprisingly, we find that in the presence of acceleration, the critical limit becomes smooth, and is obtained simply by taking various upper bounds in the parameter space that we elucidate. The Critical black holes thus obtained have many common features with Superentropic black holes, but are manifestly not superentropic. This raises a concern as to whether Superentropic black holes actually are superentropic.1 We argue that this may not be so and that the original conclusion is likely attributed to the degeneracy of the resulting first law.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/JHEP02(2020)195Black HolesClassical Theories of Gravity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Appels
Leopoldo Cuspinera
Ruth Gregory
Pavel Krtouš
David Kubizňák
spellingShingle Michael Appels
Leopoldo Cuspinera
Ruth Gregory
Pavel Krtouš
David Kubizňák
Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?
Journal of High Energy Physics
Black Holes
Classical Theories of Gravity
author_facet Michael Appels
Leopoldo Cuspinera
Ruth Gregory
Pavel Krtouš
David Kubizňák
author_sort Michael Appels
title Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?
title_short Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?
title_full Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?
title_fullStr Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?
title_full_unstemmed Are “Superentropic” black holes superentropic?
title_sort are “superentropic” black holes superentropic?
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of High Energy Physics
issn 1029-8479
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract We study a critical limit in which asymptotically-AdS black holes develop maximal conical deficits and their horizons become non-compact. When applied to stationary rotating black holes this limit coincides with the “ultraspinning limit” and yields the Superentropic black holes whose entropy was derived recently and found to exceed the maximal possible bound imposed by the Reverse Isoperimetric Inequality [1, 2]. To gain more insight into this peculiar result, we study this limit in the context of accelerated AdS black holes that have unequal deficits along the polar axes, hence the maximal deficit need not appear on both poles simultaneously. Surprisingly, we find that in the presence of acceleration, the critical limit becomes smooth, and is obtained simply by taking various upper bounds in the parameter space that we elucidate. The Critical black holes thus obtained have many common features with Superentropic black holes, but are manifestly not superentropic. This raises a concern as to whether Superentropic black holes actually are superentropic.1 We argue that this may not be so and that the original conclusion is likely attributed to the degeneracy of the resulting first law.
topic Black Holes
Classical Theories of Gravity
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/JHEP02(2020)195
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