Probing black hole entropy via entanglement
Abstract
In this paper, we develop a method to extract the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy of D-dimensional black holes using the entanglement entropy of a lower-dimensional conformal field theory (CFT). This approach relies on two key observations. On the gravitational side, the near-horizon geometry of extremal black holes is AdS2, and the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy is entirely determined by this two-dimensional geometry. Moreover, the higher-dimensional spherical part of the black hole metric is absorbed into the D-dimensional Newton's constant GN(D), which can be effectively reduced to a two-dimensional Newton's constant GN(2). On the field theory side, the entanglement entropy of two disconnected one-dimensional conformal quantum mechanics (CQM1) can be calculated. According to the Ryu-Takayanagi (RT) prescription, this entanglement entropy computes the area of the minimal surface in the AdS2 geometry. Since the near-horizon region of the black hole and the emergent spacetime derived from the entanglement entropy share the same Penrose diagram -- with both the black hole event horizon and the RT surface corresponding to specific points on this diagram -- the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy can be probed via entanglement entropy when these points coincide. This result explicitly demonstrates that the entanglement across the event horizon is the fundamental origin of the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy.
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