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The Ruppeiner thermodynamic geometry originates from the fluctuation theory of equilibrium thermodynamics [14,40]. Consider an equilibrium isolated thermodynamic system with total entropy
$ S $ , and divide it into a small subsystem$ S_B $ and a large subsystem$ S_E $ . Additionally, we require that$ S_B \ll S_E \sim S $ . Then, the total entropy of the system reads as$ \begin{array}{l} S(x^0,x^1,\cdots) = S_B(x^0,x^1,\cdots)+S_E(x^0,x^1,\cdots), \end{array} $
(1) where the parameters
$ x^0 $ ,$ x^1 $ ,$ \cdots $ are independent thermodynamic variables. For a system in equilibrium, the entropy$ S $ has a local maximum value$ S_0 $ at$ x_0^\mu $ ($ \mu = 0,1,2,\cdots $ ). Therefore, in the vicinity of the local maximum, the entropy is expressed as$ \begin{aligned}[b] S =& S_0+\frac{\partial S_B}{\partial x_B^\mu}\Delta x^\mu_B +\frac{\partial S_E}{\partial x_E^\mu}\Delta x^\mu_E +\frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial^2 S_B}{\partial x_B^\mu \partial x_B^\nu}\Delta x^\mu_B \Delta x^\nu_B \\ & +\frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial^2 S_E}{\partial x_E^\mu \partial x_E^\nu}\Delta x^\mu_E \Delta x^\nu_E +\cdots. \end{aligned} $
(2) The first derivative terms in Eq. (2) cancel each other owing to the conservation of entropy for the equilibrium isolated system. Compared with the second derivative term for
$ S_B $ , the corresponding$ S_E $ term can be ignored because$ S_E $ is of the same order as the whole system ($ S_E \sim S $ ). Finally, we arrive at$ \Delta S = S_0-S \approx -\frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial^2 S_B}{\partial x_B^\mu \partial x_B^\nu}\Delta x^\mu_B \Delta x^\nu_B. $
(3) Then, according to the fluctuation probability given by Einstein’s formula
$ P\propto e^{S} $ , we obtain$ P(x^0,x^1,\cdots)\propto \exp\left(-\frac12 \Delta l^2\right) , $
(4) where
$ \Delta l^2 = -\frac{\partial^2 S}{\partial x^\mu \partial x^\nu}\Delta x^\mu \Delta x^\nu, $
(5) is referred to as the metric of the Ruppeiner thermodynamic geometry (here, we omit subscript
$ B $ ).For a system comprising a black hole and its surrounding infinite environment, the black hole itself is a small subsystem of the above. Returning to the example of an AdS black hole, the first law of thermodynamics is
${\rm d}M = T{\rm d}S+V{\rm d}P+\text{other terms}$ . For the situation in which all other terms are fixed, we can adjust the first law of thermodynamics slightly to obtain$ {\rm d}S = \frac{1}{T}{\rm d}M-\frac{V}{T}{\rm d}P, $
(6) which describes the entropy as a function of enthalpy (or mass) and thermodynamic pressure. Now, we set
$ x^{\mu} = (M,P) $ , with the conjugate quantities corresponding to$ x^{\mu} $ given by$ y_{\mu} = \partial S/\partial x^{\mu} = (1/T,-V/T) $ . Then, the line element Eq. (5) becomes$ \Delta l^2 = -\Delta y_{\mu} \Delta x^{\mu} $ . Finally, we can write this line element in a universal form for the AdS black hole [25]:$ \Delta l^2 = \frac{1}{T}\Delta T \Delta S+\frac{1}{T}\Delta V \Delta P. $
(7) The phase space of the AdS black hole is
$ \{T, P, S, V\} $ . For the theory of thermodynamic geometry, we use a space of generalized coordinates, such as$ \{T, P\} $ ,$ \{S, V\} $ ,$ \{T, V\} $ , and$ \{S, P\} $ for the AdS black hole. As the thermodynamic curvatures obtained in these coordinate spaces are same, we can take the coordinate space$ \{S,P\} $ as an example for the subsequent calculations and analyses in this paper. According to Eq. (7), the line element of the Ruppeiner geometry for the AdS black hole takes the following form in the coordinate space$ \{S,P\} $ :$ \Delta l^2 = \frac{1}{T}\left(\frac{\partial T}{\partial S}\right)_P \Delta S^2+\frac{2}{T}\left(\frac{\partial T}{\partial P}\right)_S \Delta S \Delta P+\frac{1}{T}\left(\frac{\partial V}{\partial P}\right)_S \Delta P^2, $
(8) where we have used the Maxwell relation
$ (\partial T/\partial P)_{_S} = (\partial V/\partial S)_{_P} $ based on the first law of thermodynamics.In addition, we use the Christoffel symbols,
$ \Gamma^{\alpha}_{\beta\gamma} = \frac12 g^{\mu\alpha}\left(\partial_{\gamma}g_{\mu\beta}+\partial_{\beta}g_{\mu\gamma}-\partial_{\mu}g_{\beta\gamma}\right), $
(9) to express the Riemannian curvature tensor,
$ \begin{array}{l} {R^{\alpha}}_{\beta\gamma\delta} = \partial_{\delta}\Gamma^{\alpha}_{\beta\gamma}-\partial_{\gamma}\Gamma^{\alpha}_{\beta\delta}+ \Gamma^{\mu}_{\beta\gamma}\Gamma^{\alpha}_{\mu\delta}-\Gamma^{\mu}_{\beta\delta}\Gamma^{\alpha}_{\mu\gamma}. \end{array} $
(10) Consequently, we can obtain the thermodynamic (scalar) curvature,
$ \begin{array}{l} R = g^{\mu\nu}{R^{\xi}}_{\mu\xi\nu}. \end{array} $
(11) -
To study the relationship between the interactions among black hole molecules and their thermal motion, as a preliminary and coarse-grained description, we define the following dimensionless ratio to characterize the strength between the interactions and the thermal motion:
$ \eta: = \frac{\rm{Interaction}}{\rm{Thermal\; motion}} \approx \frac{\rm{The\; magnitude\; of\; thermodynamic\; curvature \times Planck\; volume}}{\rm{Temperature\; \times\; entropy}}. $
(12) There are several important points that must be considered here:
● In regular thermodynamics, the key notion used to describe the phase transition is the free energy, which measures the competition between interactions and the thermal motions. In particular, for the free energy, the degree of the thermal motion is measured by the product of the temperature and entropy of the system.
● First, through analysis, it can be seen that the temperature, entropy, and volume have dimensions of
$ [\text{length}]^{-1} $ ,$ [\text{length}]^{2} $ , and$ [\text{length}]^{3} $ , respectively. Meanwhile, the thermodynamic curvature has the dimension of$ [\text{length}]^{-2} $ , which is consistent with the dimension of thermodynamic pressure in the natural system of units. To retain the same dimension as that of the measurement (the product of the temperature and entropy) of the thermal motion, analogous to the$ PV $ term in ordinary thermodynamics, we posit that the combination of the thermodynamic curvature and a certain volume may be a suitable physical quantity to describe the degree of the interaction between black hole molecules. Second, Ruppeiner [40] proposed that if we imagine the fluid as separate pieces, each with volume$ v $ ,$ |R| $ is the average number of correlated "pixels." Next, we assume that each pixel occupies approximately one Planck volume, because the Planck length is often suggested as a physical constant for quantum gravity. Therefore, we can approximate that the product of the absolute value of thermodynamic curvature and the size of each pixel qualitatively reflects the interaction strength. Again, this is only a preliminary exploration and, at present, there is no direct evidence for such a conjecture.● The dimensions of the numerator and denominator in Eq. (12) are consistent. When the interaction represented by the numerator and the thermal motion represented by the denominator are in balance with each other, the ratio
$ \eta $ is a fixed constant, and a fixed constant can always be set to 1. Thus,$ \eta = 1 $ is special and important.● If
$ \eta>1 $ , the interactions between molecules dominate the black hole system.● If
$ \eta<1 $ , the thermal motion of molecules dominates the black hole system.● If
$ \eta = 1 $ , the interactions between molecules and the thermal motion of molecules reach a competitive balance, and the whole system will be in transition from the interaction state to the thermal motion state, or vice versa.Next, we use the newly introduced measurement to investigate the microscopic behaviors of several kinds of AdS black holes. In the following discussion, we often set the value of Planck volume as a unit.
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We start by considering a four-dimensional charged AdS black hole, the metric of which can be expressed as [11,12,30]
$ {\rm d} s^2 = -f(r){\rm d}t^2+\frac{{\rm d} r^2}{f(r)}+r^2({\rm d}\theta^2+\sin^2 \theta {\rm d}\varphi^2), $
(13) where the function
$ f(r) = 1-2M/r+r^2/l^2+q^2/r^2 $ , in which$ M $ is the mass of the black hole,$ l $ is the curvature radius of the AdS spacetime, and$ q $ is the total charge of the black hole. The horizon radius$ r_h $ is regarded as the largest root of equation$ f(r) = 0 $ . Then, the temperature of the black hole can be written as$ T = \frac{8P S^2+S-\pi q^2}{4S\sqrt{\pi S}}, $
(14) where the entropy is
$ S = \pi r_h^2 $ , and thermodynamic pressure is$ P = 3/(8\pi l^2) $ . Furthermore, the thermodynamic volume is$ V = 4\pi r_h^3/3 $ . Hence, according to Eq. (11), we obtain the thermodynamic curvature of the four-dimensional charged AdS black hole:$ R = \frac{2\pi q^2-S}{S(8P S^2+S-\pi q^2)}. $
(15) For the sake of convenience, we introduce some dimensionless reduced parameters as follows [11,19]:
$ t: = \frac{T}{T_c}, \;\;\;\; s: = \frac{S}{S_c}, \;\;\;\; p: = \frac{P}{P_c}, \;\;\;\; \zeta: = \left|\frac{R}{R_c}\right|, $
(16) where
$ T_c = \frac{\sqrt{6}}{18\pi q}, \;\;\; S_c = 6\pi q^2, \;\;\; P_c = \frac{1}{96\pi q^2}, \;\;\; R_c = -\frac{1}{12\pi q^2}. $
(17) Next, we can determine the dimensionless ratio between the dimensionless measurement
$ ts $ of the thermal motion and the dimensionless measurement$ \zeta $ of the interaction:$ \eta = \left|\frac{32(1-3s)}{\sqrt{s}(3ps^2+6s-1)^2}\right|. $
(18) Figure 1 shows plots of the behavior of the dimensionless ratio
$ \eta $ with respect to the dimensionless entropy$ s $ at different values of the dimensionless pressure$ p $ . Using these plots, we can analyze some novel properties of the thermal microscopic behaviors of charged AdS black holes:Figure 1. (color online) The dimensionless ratio
$ \eta $ between the interaction and the thermal motion with respect to the dimensionless entropy$ S/S_c $ at the different dimensionless pressures$ P/P_c $ for a charged AdS black hole.● For the charged AdS black hole system, there is indeed competition between the interactions among black hole molecules and their thermal motion.
● At
$ s = 1/3 $ , the thermodynamic curvature equals zero. Therefore, we can divide the microscopic behaviors of the black hole into two branches. Branch-1 (B1) corresponds to the interval of$ 0<s<1/3 $ , while branch-2 (B2) corresponds to the interval of$ s>1/3 $ .● In B1, we can see that regardless of the value of the dimensionless pressure
$ p $ , as the dimensionless entropy$ s $ increases, the dimensionless ratio$ \eta $ decreases monotonically and always has an intersection with the curve$ \eta = 1 $ . This implies that the black hole always experiences a transition from the interaction state to the thermal motion state.● In B2, as the dimensionless entropy
$ s $ increases, the dimensionless ratio$ \eta $ shows a trend of first increasing and then decreasing, while its intersection with the curve$ \eta = 1 $ depends on the value of the dimensionless pressure$ p $ . Numerical calculation yields a new critical dimensionless pressure of$ p\approx 3.93 $ . When$ 0< p < 3.93 $ , two intersections are observed. The first intersection represents the transition from the thermal motion state to the interaction state, while the second intersection signifies the transition from the interaction state to the thermal motion state. When$ p\geqslant 3.93 $ , the two intersections merge and disappear, indicating that the black hole will always be in the thermal motion state. -
The Schwarzschild-AdS black hole is a special case of the charged AdS black hole for which
$ q = 0 $ . The temperature and thermodynamic curvature of the Schwarzschild-AdS black hole are [25]$ T = \frac{8P S+1}{4\sqrt{\pi S}}, \;\;\;\; R = -\frac{1}{8P S^2+S}. $
(19) To these expressions, we introduce a dimensionless quantity
$ u = 8PS $ , enabling the temperature, entropy, and the thermodynamic curvature to be expressed as the rescaled temperature$ t $ , entropy$ s $ , and thermodynamic curvature$ \zeta$ $ t = \frac{T}{\sqrt{8\pi P}} = \frac{u+1}{4\pi\sqrt{u}}, \;\;\; s = 8\pi PS = \pi u, \;\;\; \zeta = \left|\frac{R}{8P}\right| = \frac{1}{u(u+1)}. $
(20) Subsequently, the dimensionless ratio
$ \eta $ can be written as$ \eta = \frac{4}{u^{3/2}(u+1)}. $
(21) The behavior of the dimensionless ratio
$ \eta $ between the thermal motion and the interaction with respect to the quantity$ u $ is plotted in Fig. 2. We can clearly see that as$ u $ increases, the dimensionless ratio$ \eta $ decreases monotonically and always has an intersection with the curve$ \eta = 1 $ at$ u = 1 $ . This implies that the Schwarzschild-AdS black hole always experiences a transition from the interaction state to the thermal motion state. -
The metric of the Gauss-Bonnet AdS black hole in
$ d $ dimensions is [44]$ {\rm d}s^2 = -f(r){\rm d}t^2+\frac{1}{f(r)}{\rm d}r^2+r^2 {\rm d}\Omega^2, $
(22) in which
$ f(r) = 1+\frac{r^2}{2\alpha_0}\left(1-\sqrt{1+\frac{64\pi\alpha_0 {\cal M}}{(d-2)r^{d-1}\Sigma}-\frac{64\pi\alpha_0 P}{(d-1)(d-2)}}\right), $
where
$ \mathrm{d}\Omega^2 $ is the square of line element on a$ (d-2) $ -dimensional maximally symmetric Einstein manifold with volume$ \Sigma $ . The black hole mass is$ \cal M $ , and the pressure is$ P = (d-1)(d-2)/(16\pi l^2) $ . The auxiliary symbol$ \alpha_0 $ is related to the Gauss-Bonnet coefficient$ \alpha_{_{\mathrm{GB}}} $ via$ \alpha_0 = (d-3) \times(d-4)\alpha_{_{\mathrm{GB}}} $ for compactness.When
$ d = 5 $ , the temperature and entropy of the Gauss-Bonnet AdS black hole take the following forms in terms of the horizon radius$ r_h $ [44,45]:$ T = \frac{8\pi P r_h^3+3r_h}{6\pi(r_h^2+2\alpha_0)}, \qquad S = \frac{\pi^2 r_h(r_h^2+6\alpha_0)}{2}. $
(23) Meanwhile, the thermodynamic curvature for the five-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet AdS black hole in terms of the horizon radius
$ r_h $ is [46]$ R = -\frac{4}{\pi^2 r_h(r_h^2+2\alpha_0)(8\pi P r_h^2+3)}. $
(24) Similarly, the dimensionless temperature
$ t $ , entropy$ s $ , and thermodynamic curvature$ \zeta $ can be written as$ t = \frac{p x^3+3x}{3x^2+1}, \;\;\; s = \frac{x^3+x}{2}, \;\;\; \zeta = \frac{4}{(3x^2+1)(p x^3+3x)}, $
(25) in which
$ t = T/T_c $ ,$ s = S/S_c $ ,$ p = P/P_c $ ,$ \zeta = |R/R_c| $ , and$ x = r_h/r_c $ , where [44-46]$ \begin{aligned}[b] T_c =& \frac{1}{2\pi\sqrt{6\alpha_0}}, \;\;\; r_c = \sqrt{6\alpha_0}, \;\;\; S_c = 6 \pi^2 \alpha_0 \sqrt{6\alpha_0}, \\ P_c =& \frac{1}{48\pi \alpha_0}, \;\;\; R_c = -\frac{1}{8\pi^2 \alpha_0 \sqrt{6\alpha_0}}. \end{aligned} $
Thus, the dimensionless ratio between the thermal motion and the interaction is
$ \eta = \frac{8}{(p x^3+3x)^2(x^3+x)}. $
(26) The behavior of the ratio
$ \eta $ with respect to$ x $ for different dimensionless pressures$ p $ is presented in Fig. 3. Clearly, as$ x $ increases, the dimensionless ratio$ \eta $ decreases monotonically and always has an intersection with the curve$ \eta = 1 $ . This implies that the five-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet AdS black hole always experiences a transition between the interaction state and the thermal motion state.
A new measure of thermal micro-behavior for the AdS black hole
- Received Date: 2020-05-22
- Accepted Date: 2020-08-17
- Available Online: 2021-01-15
Abstract: Inspired by the hypothesis of the black hole molecule, with the help of the Hawking temperature, entropy, and the thermodynamic curvature of black holes, we propose a new measure of the relation between the interaction and the thermal motion of molecules of the AdS black hole as a preliminary and coarse-grained description. The proposed measure introduces a dimensionless ratio to characterize this relation and shows that there is indeed competition between the interactions of black hole molecules and their thermal motion. For a charged AdS black hole, below the critical dimensionless pressure, there are three transitions between the interaction and thermal motion states. In contrast, above the critical dimensionless pressure, only one transition takes place. For the Schwarzschild-AdS and five-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet AdS black holes, a transition always occurs between the interaction and thermal motion states.