John...you need some experts here for more authortative discussion...we are now way "above my paygrade"...
But Verlinde's idea seem clearly related [see below] to the current paper...if you search these forums you can find a lot more; try subjects like ...emergent gravity...Verlinde...
to get started...
If you check below you'll see information, entropy, gravity, degrees of freedom, spacetime[geometry] and lots more, even Bose-Einstein condensates and black holes, are all related...but nobody, I think, seems to know exactly how. So various researchers start from different points, different perspectives...
Some time ago Marcus [a widely read participant here] posted about emergent gravity and entropy and a long discussion ensued: I did not record the thread identity itself but saved some explanations/posts and references which somewhat clarify entropy, information, and gravity:
I had forgotton [as usual] about some earlier discussions from which I kept some notes:
This may have been Marcus:
LQG and allied QG approaches are about geometry. For geometry to have entropy it MUST have microscopic degrees of freedom. This opens up a big field of investigation (where Loop is already an active program) namely, what are the underlying degrees of freedom of geometric relationships. String researchers can be expected to follow suit.
a prior post of mine:
...If anyone has determined that one or several of these [physical entities] is "fundamental" meaning it is the first to emerge and precipitates the others, I have not seen that yet. My only personal hesitancy is that quantum theory, incomplete though it may be, suggests there is no space and time at the tinest scales...Planck size stuff...so I personally wonder if geometry/time is the first to emerge...
For further insights:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergent_gravity
Induced gravity
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Induced gravity (or emergent gravity) is an idea in quantum gravity that space-time background emerges as a mean field approximation of underlying microscopic degrees of freedom, similar to the fluid mechanics approximation of Bose–Einstein condensates. The concept was originally proposed by Andrei Sakharov in 1967...
Thermodynamics of Spacetime:
The Einstein Equation of State
Ted Jacobson (1995, 9 pages)
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/gr-qc/pdf/9504/9504004v2.pdf
The Einstein equation is derived from the proportionality of entropy
and horizon area together with the fundamental relation _Q = T dS
connecting heat, entropy, and temperature. ,,,,,,,,Viewed in this way, the Einstein equation
is an equation of state...
How did classical General Relativity know that horizon area would turn out to be a form of entropy, and that surface gravity is a temperature?...
That causal horizons should be associated with entropy is suggested by
the observation that they hide information. In fact, the overwhelming
majority of the information that is hidden resides in correlations between
vacuum fluctuations just inside and outside of the horizon...
On the Origin of Gravity and the Laws of Newton
Erik Verlinde (69 pages)
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/1001/1001.0785v1.pdf
Gravity is explained as an entropic force caused by changes in the information associated with the positions of material bodies. A relativistic generalization of the presented arguments directly leads to the Einstein equations. When space is emergent even Newton's law of inertia needs to be explained. The equivalence principle leads us to conclude that it is actually this law of inertia whose origin is entropic...In this paper we will argue that the central notion needed to derive
gravity is information. ...The most important assumption will be that the information associated with a part of space obeys the holographic principle
How entropy evolves:
Greene:
When gravity matters as it did in the high density early universe, clumpiness - not uniformity- is the norm.
[my prior post:]...So shortly after the big bang uniformity actually means LOW entropy as gravity was huge...one DOES NOT expect uniformity under such conditions of high gravity to reflect high entropy. (I think Penrose agrees.) (2) Post #6
Then he points out (by invoking the Bekenstein-Hawking formula) that a universe which has gravitationally condensed into black holes has an even higher entropy. ...
Black hole entropy IS maximum because gravity is maximum in a given region of space.
Greene:
When gravity flexes it's muscles to the limit it becomes the most efficient generator of entropy in the universe. Since we can't see inside a black hole, it's impossible for us to detect any rearrangements...
..,meaning hidden information (entropy) is maximized.(3) Post#6: [someone posted doubting a Roger Penrose claim:]
Penrose also argues (his Fig. 27.10) --- without seeming to provide any proof --- that any gravitational condensation (perhaps into galaxies or stars) will increase the entropy of a uniform distribution of matter, and hence conform with the Second Law of thermodynamics
.
Greene: [confirms Penrose perspective:]
In calculating entropy you need to tally up the contributions from all sources. For the initially diffuse gas cloud you find that the entropy decrease through the formation of orderly clumps is more than compensated by the heat generated as the gas compresses, and ultimately, by the enormous heat and light released when nuclear processes begin to take place...The overwhelming drive towards disorder does not mean that orderly structures like stars and planets...can't form...the entropy balance sheet is still in the black even though certain constitutents have become more ordered.
edit: I happened to just read this which sounds like a 'relative' of Dreyer's approach:
"Spin networks provide a language to describe quantum geometry of space. Spin foam does the same job on spacetime. A spin network is a one-dimensional graph, together with labels on its vertices and edges which encodes aspects of a spatial geometry...
A spin network is defined as a diagram (like the Feynman diagram) that makes a basis of connections between the elements of a differentiable manifold for the Hilbert spaces defined over them. ... A spin foam may be viewed as a quantum history..."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spin_foam
[Roger Penrose has been working on spin[foam] networks since the 1950's because he thinks spacetime and physics is fundamentally discrete. ]