Let us reflect on the idea that black holes are
in their entropy or information flow. What was needed to discuss this idea was a boundary so that it has a temperature
T. Using this line of thought, we can try to apply this idea to holographic screens which also have a finite temperature
T. In our approach, we choose a system of a mass
M with a holographic screen at a distance
r (the screen stores all the data of the bulk). We further assume the screen to be spherical. We now treat this system as equivalent to the black hole system and claim that this behaves as a 1D system in its information flow. In what follows, it is clear that this claim that the system of mass
M with a holographic screen follows the equation of a hot black body similar to a black hole is valid only if the distance of the holographic screen
r is very large since as we show in this paper, this idea directly constrains the dependency of gravitational force on distance which is only possible to be modified at large distances only, in agreement with at least our experience so far
1. A technical explanation shall be given later on. For now, let us verify whether or not Newton’s law of gravity satisfies our claim. The temperature
T of the screen is given as [
19]
Here
is the normal vector on the screen.
is the acceleration of a particle close to the holographic screen and
is the Newtonian potential defined as
where
is a global time-like Killing vector field. For a spherically symmetric spacetime, the metric reads
where
is the line element of a unit 2-sphere. Thus, the timeline killing vector and Newtonian potential is
Therefore, the temperature becomes
2[
21]
This gives the power as
This value leads to the system as effectively 2D (using Equation ()) and not 1D as required. Let us see what happens if we modify the metric
such that it has now a logarithmic dependence on
r as
with
k being a constant to be determined. This metric ansatz will give Newtonian gravity as
in the weak-field limit. It is important to note that the metric solution spelled above does not come from the Einstein-Hilbert action but rather from some modified theory of gravity that respects diffeomorphism invariance. In this case, the temperature becomes
This gives the power as
and we obtain
Now, this expression is similar to Pendry’s limit (Equation (
7)), and the system effectively behaves as 1D. So, this expression for Newtonian gravity satisfies our requirement. It is easy to check that no other dependency of
r will satisfy our requirement; thus,
is the unique dependency. Before we evaluate the value of constant
k, we return to how far the screen is placed. In general, the holographic screen can be placed at any distance. However, it is clear that our system cannot be blindly treated as a black body. But it turns out that in certain limits, it can be made to act as a black body (at least in the way that it approximately follows the Stefan-Boltzmann law). We, therefore, drop the assumption that the energy spectrum tends to infinity and keep the upper limit finite (yet large). The equation of power
P is therefore given by
Let us perform the substitution
to obtain
When
T is very small which happens when
r is very large (since the Unrhuh temperature gives
T,
) and since
is finite (yet large), the upper limit of the integral can be approximated as approaching infinity (
) and Equation (
22) takes the standard form of power emitted by a black body (Equation (
8)). If
T is large (for relatively small
r), the upper limit remains finite (and small), there is some dependency on
T as well as
coming from the finite integral, and therefore it is not of the form of a black body and cannot be treated equivalently as a black hole system (which is taken to be a black body) and therefore as a 1D system. This brings us to an important conclusion, a system of mass
M with a holographic screen at a distance
r can be treated as a 1D system similar to a black hole only when the screen is at a very large distance. The immediate question that comes up in the mind is, how large
r should be or what can be the minimum value of
r. For this, we turn to the expression for
a at a large distance, which varies as
. Let us apply this modified law for a spherical galaxy of mass
M at large
r which becomes
. This gives
This shows that the rotation curves are flat at large distances since
k is a constant. From this, we infer that this dependence solves the problem of dark matter. We can find the value of
k using the Tully-Fischer relation and MOND theory of Milgrom, where
, which gives
We, therefore, obtain that at large distance
with
being a cutoff length scale, the law of gravity is modified as
Thus, we find that at very large distances, the behavior of gravity is similar to gravity in two dimensions and obtained its exact expression as Equation (
25).