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arxiv: 1504.00501 · v2 · submitted 2015-04-02 · 🪐 quant-ph · cond-mat.stat-mech· gr-qc· hep-th

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Quantum entanglement and Hawking temperature

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classification 🪐 quant-ph cond-mat.stat-mechgr-qchep-th
keywords entropyentanglementhawkingquantumsystemsystemstemperaturethermodynamic
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The thermodynamic entropy of an isolated system is given by its von Neumann entropy. Over the last few years, there is an intense activity to understand thermodynamic entropy from the principles of quantum mechanics. More specifically, is there a relation between the (von Neumann) entropy of entanglement between a system and some (separate) environment is related to the thermodynamic entropy? It is difficult to obtain the relation for many body systems, hence, most of the work in the literature has focused on small number systems. In this work, we consider black-holes --- that are simple yet macroscopic systems --- and show that a direct connection could not be made between the entropy of entanglement and the Hawking temperature. In this work, within the adiabatic approximation, we explicitly show that the Hawking temperature is indeed given by the rate of change of the entropy of entanglement across a black hole's horizon with regard to the system energy. This is yet another numerical evidence to understand the key features of black hole thermodynamics from the viewpoint of quantum information theory.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Emergent Hawking Radiation and Quantum Sensing in a Quenched Chiral Spin Chain

    cond-mat.stat-mech 2026-02 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    A quenched chiral spin chain produces analog Hawking radiation with non-Planckian spectrum but Poissonian statistics, detectable by a weakly coupled qubit sensor that reveals the horizon-induced temperature.