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The holographic principle was motivated by the discovery that black hole entropy is proportional to the area of the event horizon rather than the volume: SA. This suggests that the fundamental degrees of freedom of a region scale with its boundary, not its interior.[1]

Holographic principle: information in a volume encoded on its boundary surface.

Origin

Basic idea

The principle states that a physical theory in a volume can be equivalently described by a theory defined on its boundary.

This is analogous to a hologram, where a two-dimensional surface encodes a three-dimensional image.

In this sense, spacetime itself may be an emergent phenomenon.

AdS/CFT correspondence

The most concrete realization of the holographic principle is the AdS/CFT correspondence.

It states that:

  • a gravitational theory in anti-de Sitter (AdS) space
  • is equivalent to a conformal field theory (CFT) on its boundary

This duality provides a powerful tool for studying quantum gravity and strongly interacting systems.[2]

Information and entropy

The holographic principle implies that the maximum entropy in a region is bounded by its surface area:

Skc3A4G.

This bound is known as the Bekenstein bound.

It places a fundamental limit on the amount of information that can be stored in a given region of space.

Physical significance

The holographic principle:

  • suggests spacetime may be emergent,
  • connects gravity with quantum information,
  • provides insight into black hole physics,
  • plays a central role in modern quantum gravity.

See also

Table of contents (185 articles)

Index

Full contents

9. Quantum optics and experiments (5) ↑ Back to index
14. Plasma and fusion physics (8) ↑ Back to index
Conceptual illustration of plasma physics in a fusion context, showing magnetically confined ionized gas in a tokamak and the collective behavior governed by electromagnetic fields and transport processes.
Conceptual illustration of plasma physics in a fusion context, showing magnetically confined ionized gas in a tokamak and the collective behavior governed by electromagnetic fields and transport processes.

References

  1. Susskind, Leonard (1995). "The World as a Hologram". Journal of Mathematical Physics. 
  2. Maldacena, Juan (1998). "The Large N Limit of Superconformal Field Theories and Supergravity". Advances in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics. 
Author: Harold Foppele

Source attribution: Quantum Holographic principle