- #1
Pacopag
- 197
- 4
I would like to use the formula S=A/4 to find the entropy of a black hole. But before I go ahead and believe that formula, there are a couple of subtleties that are troubling me.
First of all, in just about every "classical" treatment of black hole thermodynamics, there is usually the underlying assumption that the spacetime is 4-dimensional, and asymptotically flat. Does anyone know if the above formula S=A/4 holds in higher-dimensional spacetimes that aren't asymptotically flat?
Thanks.
First of all, in just about every "classical" treatment of black hole thermodynamics, there is usually the underlying assumption that the spacetime is 4-dimensional, and asymptotically flat. Does anyone know if the above formula S=A/4 holds in higher-dimensional spacetimes that aren't asymptotically flat?
Thanks.