10–14 Jul 2023
Radboud University Nijmegen
Europe/Amsterdam timezone

Second law from the Noether current on null hypersurfaces

14 Jul 2023, 14:30
15m
CC3 (Radboud University)

CC3

Radboud University

Mercatorpad 1 Nijmegen

Speaker

Antoine Rignon-Bret (Aix-Marseille Université)

Description

I study the balance law equation of surface charges in the presence of background fields. The construction allows a unified description of Noether's theorem for both global and local symmetries. From the balance law associated with some of these symmetries, I will discuss generalizations of Wald's Noether entropy formula and general entropy balance laws on null hypersurfaces based on the null energy conditions, interpreted as an entropy creation term. The entropy is generally the so-called improved Noether charge, a quantity that has recently been investigated by many authors, associated to null future-pointing diffeomorphisms. These local and dynamical definitions of entropy on the black hole horizon differ from the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy through terms proportional to the first derivative of the area along the null geodesics. Two different definitions of the dynamical entropy are identified, deduced from gravity symplectic potentials providing a suitable notion of gravitational flux which vanish on non-expanding horizons. The first one is proposed as a definition of the entropy for dynamical black holes by Wald and Zhang, and it satisfies the physical process first law locally. The second one vanishes on any cross section of Minkowski's light cone. I study general properties of its balance law. In particular, I look at first order perturbations around a non expanding horizon. Furthermore, I show that the dynamical entropy increases on the event horizon formed by a spherical symmetric collapse between the two stationary states of vanishing flux, i.e the initial flat light cone and the final stationary black hole. I compare this process to a phase transition, in which the symmetry group of the stationary black hole phase is enlarged by the supertranslations.

Presentation materials