Timeline for What does the zeroth law of thermodynamics mean in curved spacetime?
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
7 events
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Jun 2, 2022 at 7:01 | comment | added | A.V.S. | @MoreAnonymous: Schwarzschild and Reissner-Nordstöm black holes are static. Kerr and Kerr-Newman are stationary. Extension of the analysis on the stationary solutions is discussed in Santiago's thesis (and the original paper). Also keep in mind, that when people talk about zeroth law in the context of black hole they mean related but different thing. The bridge between two meanings is in the QFT in curved spacetime where quantum fields provide a natural medium for thermodynamics. | |
Jun 1, 2022 at 12:24 | comment | added | More Anonymous | @avs the zeroth law of thermodynamics holds for black holes as well no? But that is of different form than the metric u mention. Does this mean the analysis is incomplete? | |
Jan 26, 2022 at 7:45 | comment | added | user1271772 | Thanks for pointing me again to the early version. I'm still sometimes baffled by the voting practices on this site. An HNQ can get a hundred upvotes in one day, but an equally good question (or better quality question) can go several months without any votes at all. | |
Jan 26, 2022 at 7:25 | comment | added | A.V.S. | @user1271772: The question has a downvote. My guess is that someone didn't like initial formulation of the question that was mixing spacetime points with worldlines. | |
Jan 26, 2022 at 5:05 | comment | added | user1271772 | Thanks for this answer, I gave you +1. However, I wonder why the question had a score of 0, if it was worth you spending all this time on it? It has a score of +1 now because I upvoted it, but I was curious why it had a score of 0 at the time. | |
Jan 23, 2022 at 19:57 | vote | accept | More Anonymous | ||
Jan 23, 2022 at 19:25 | history | answered | A.V.S. | CC BY-SA 4.0 |