Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Notation
- Quotation acknowledgements
- 1 A zoo of astrophysical transient sources
- 2 Electromagnetic radiation processes
- 3 Curved spacetime and gravitational waves
- 4 Hadronic processes and neutrino emissions
- 5 Relativistic fluid dynamics
- 6 Winds and jets
- 7 Relativistic shock waves
- 8 Relativistic blast waves
- 9 Accretion disks and tori
- 10 Entropic attraction in black hole binaries
- 11 Transient sources from rotating black holes
- 12 Searching for long bursts in gravitational waves
- 13 Epilogue: the multimessenger Transient Universe
- Appendix A Some properties of Kerr black holes
- Appendix B Cosmological event rates
- Appendix C Relaxation limited evaporation
- Appendix D Some units and constants
- References
- Index
10 - Entropic attraction in black hole binaries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Notation
- Quotation acknowledgements
- 1 A zoo of astrophysical transient sources
- 2 Electromagnetic radiation processes
- 3 Curved spacetime and gravitational waves
- 4 Hadronic processes and neutrino emissions
- 5 Relativistic fluid dynamics
- 6 Winds and jets
- 7 Relativistic shock waves
- 8 Relativistic blast waves
- 9 Accretion disks and tori
- 10 Entropic attraction in black hole binaries
- 11 Transient sources from rotating black holes
- 12 Searching for long bursts in gravitational waves
- 13 Epilogue: the multimessenger Transient Universe
- Appendix A Some properties of Kerr black holes
- Appendix B Cosmological event rates
- Appendix C Relaxation limited evaporation
- Appendix D Some units and constants
- References
- Index
Summary
Behind it all is surely an idea so simple, so beautiful, that when we grasp it–in a decade, a century, or a millennium–we will all say to each other, how could it have been otherwise? How could we have been so stupid?
John Archibald Wheeler (1911–2008)Gravitation according to general relativity remains singularly challenging to understand from first principles in relation to the other forces in Nature. On the other hand, it describes a broad range of phenomena in cosmology and astrophysics, some of which are well constrained by observations of the galaxy redshifts, the cosmic microwave background [338], supermassive black holes in galactic nuclei, radio-pulsars in neutron star–neutron star binaries [297], and, possibly in the near future, binary mergers, that should ultimately lead to new insights on its origin.
Geometrically, general relativity is built on the Riemann tensor as discussed in Chapter 3, which describes spacetime in terms of two-surfaces for which the Planck scale – the smallest length scale in Nature – introduces a unit of area. The event horizons of black holes are null-surfaces that carry entropy [77] and temperature by virtue of their radiation properties [276]. For macroscopic black holes, the entropy represents a large, hidden phase space of an underlying structure of spacetime and matter. It is tempting to think of low energy manifestations in the real world also without black holes, such as Newton's law between two ordinary point particles [625].
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Relativistic Astrophysics of the Transient UniverseGravitation, Hydrodynamics and Radiation, pp. 227 - 251Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012