Abstract

We study the thermodynamics of spherically symmetric, neutral and non-rotating black holes in conformal (Weyl) gravity. To this end, we apply different methods: (i) the evaluation of the specific heat; (ii) the study of the entropy concavity; (iii) the geometrical approach to thermodynamics known as thermodynamic geometry; (iv) the Poincaré method that relates equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium thermodynamics. We show that the thermodynamic geometry approach can be applied to conformal gravity too, because all the key thermodynamic variables are insensitive to Weyl scaling. The first two methods, (i) and (ii), indicate that the entropy of a de Sitter black hole is always in the interval 2/3le Sle 1, whereas thermodynamic geometry suggests that, at S=1, there is a second order phase transition to an Anti de Sitter black hole. On the other hand, we obtain from the Poincaré method (iv) that black holes whose entropy is S < 4/3 are stable or in a saddle-point, whereas when S>4/3 they are always unstable, hence there is no definite answer on whether such transition occurs. Since thermodynamics geometry takes the view that the entropy is an extensive quantity, while the Poincaré method does not require extensiveness, it is valuable to present here the analysis based on both approaches, and so we do.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWe study black holes (BHs) thermodynamics in Conformal Gravity (CG). We do so by employing various methods, as, e.g., Thermodynamic Geometry (TG) [7,8,9,10,11], that is a very active area of research by itself

  • We studied the thermodynamics of spherically symmetric, neutral and non-rotating black holes in Conformal Gravity

  • The other methods used here are the evaluation of the specific heat, and the Poincaré method

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Summary

Introduction

We study BH thermodynamics in CG. We do so by employing various methods, as, e.g., Thermodynamic Geometry (TG) [7,8,9,10,11], that is a very active area of research by itself. BH are not extensive objects, their entropy scales as the area, not the volume, stability is not related to the concavity of the entropy function Stability of this kind of systems need be studied with a different criteria, named Poincaré (or turning point) method [15], that holds for a generic outof-equilibrium entropy, and requires only that equilibrium is reached in an extreme point [16,17,18,19,20,21,22]. The paper is closed by two Appendices, devoted to the details of some computations

BH thermodynamics in CG
Comparison with standard gravity
Thermodynamics
Ruppeiner metric
Extensive thermodynamics
Stability in non extensive thermodynamics
Stability analysis: specific heat and TG
Stability studied with Poincaré method
Comments and conclusions
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