Black hole entropy in canonical quantum gravity and superstring theory
- 15 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 50 (4), 2700-2711
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.50.2700
Abstract
In this paper the entropy of an eternal Schwarzschild black hole is studied in the limit of an infinite black hole mass. The problem is addressed from the point of view of both canonical quantum gravity and superstring theory. The entropy per unit area of a free scalar field propagating in a fixed black hole background is shown to be quadratically divergent near the horizon. It is shown that such quantum corrections to the entropy per unit area are equivalent to the quantum corrections to the gravitational coupling. Unlike field theory, superstring theory provides a set of identifiable configurations which give rise to the classical contribution to the entropy per unit area. These configurations can be understood as open superstrings with both ends attached to the horizon. The entropy per unit area is shown to be finite to all orders in superstring perturbation theory. The importance of these conclusions to the resolution of the problem of black hole information loss is reiterated.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Black hole entropy and the dimensional continuation of the Gauss-Bonnet theoremPhysical Review Letters, 1994
- The stretched horizon and black hole complementarityPhysical Review D, 1993
- Entropy and areaPhysical Review Letters, 1993
- Evanescent black holesPhysical Review D, 1992
- Möbius infinity subtraction and effective action in the σ-model approach to closed string theoryPhysics Letters B, 1988
- Renormalization of the Möbius volumePhysics Letters B, 1988
- Evaluation of the one loop string path integralCommunications in Mathematical Physics, 1986
- On the quantum structure of a black holeNuclear Physics B, 1985
- Action integrals and partition functions in quantum gravityPhysical Review D, 1977
- Notes on black-hole evaporationPhysical Review D, 1976