1. Introduction
Thermodynamic concepts—such as entropy, temperature, and energy flow—have deeply influenced how we understand gravity [
1], especially in the context of black holes. Since the pioneering work of Bekenstein, Hawking, and others [
2,
3,
4], geometric quantities like horizon area have been linked to entropy and information content. At the same time, it has long been appreciated that self-gravitating systems exhibit negative specific heat, a feature already visible in Newtonian theory [
5,
6]. These thermodynamic insights are often associated with equilibrium or stationary horizons—but their role in dynamical, collapsing systems remains less concretely understood.
This paper investigates whether classical general relativity (GR), without quantum input, already supports such thermodynamic behavior during the late stages of gravitational collapse. Specifically, we examine a simple but instructive model: a timelike thin shell separates a regular constant-curvature (de Sitter) interior from a Schwarzschild or Schwarzschild–de Sitter exterior. Thin-shell techniques provide an exact classical framework for this setup, based on Israel’s junction condition and the Birkhoff–Schwarzschild geometry [
7,
8,
9].
After a short formation stage, we focus on a post-transient regime with negligible inflow, where the exterior mass is constant. The junction condition can then be reformulated as an effective potential for the shell radius , allowing a transparent analysis of its dynamics. Within this framework, we derive three core results:
- (i)
a closed-form sufficient threshold for outward shell evolution,
- (ii)
the boundedness of scalar curvature invariants across the entire spacetime domain, and
- (iii)
a simple, falsifiable, mass-scaled frequency bound for near-shell spectral features observable at infinity.
Although purely classical, the setup naturally supports a thermodynamic interpretation: area growth, energy-driven expansion, and behavior consistent with negative heat capacity. This interpretation is discussed separately and used to connect the geometric findings to coarse-graining intuitions—without treating thermodynamics as a fundamental input.
1.1. Scope
The analysis is restricted to classical GR with spherical symmetry, timelike thin shells, and static patches with
. The lightlike (null) limit [
10] is not considered. Quantum-information aspects such as evaporation, Page time, or firewalls lie outside the present scope; see [
11,
12,
13] for background.
1.2. Organization
Section 2 introduces the geometric framework and conservation laws, leading to the effective-potential form of the junction condition.
Section 3 derives the sufficient threshold for outward shell evolution.
Section 4 proves curvature boundedness.
Section 5 introduces the mass-scaled redshift bound for near-shell frequencies.
Section 6 discusses physical interpretation, observational falsifiability, and future directions.
2. Geometric Setup and Methods
This section establishes the classical geometric framework used to model late-time gravitational collapse in spherical symmetry. The setup consists of two vacuum regions—an interior and an exterior—joined across a timelike thin shell. The entire analysis remains within general relativity (GR), using exact solutions and matching conditions.
2.1. Exterior (Vacuum, Spherical Symmetry)
By Birkhoff’s theorem, the vacuum exterior of a spherically symmetric source must be Schwarzschild or Schwarzschild–de Sitter (SdS):
where
M is the exterior mass parameter (the ADM mass if
). The analysis is confined to the static region where
, consistent with timelike shell evolution.
2.2. Interior (Regular Constant Curvature)
The interior is modeled as a regular de Sitter region with constant positive curvature:
so that all interior curvature invariants are finite, e.g., the Kretschmann scalar
[
4].
2.3. Timelike Thin Shell and Junction Condition
The two spacetime regions are joined across a timelike shell at areal radius
, where
is the proper time of observers comoving with the shell. The shell is endowed with surface stress–energy tensor
, and its motion obeys the Israel junction condition [
7,
9]:
Additionally, the shell satisfies surface-energy conservation,
where
is the net normal energy flux across the shell.
2.4. Post-Transient Zero-Inflow Regime
After an initial formation stage, the analysis focuses on a late-time regime in which energy inflow is negligible. This is enforced by the condition
ensuring that the exterior mass parameter remains fixed and attention shifts to the shell dynamics governed by
and the interior scale
.
2.5. Domain and Conventions
All analysis is restricted to static patches where , ensuring that the shell remains timelike. Natural units are used throughout: , and the metric signature is .
The Israel condition can be recast in an effective-potential form by solving for
in (
3):
Turning points occur where , and the sign of determines the local evolution tendency.
To control sign behavior, a linear surface equation of state
with
and vanishing flux
is assumed. Then energy conservation (
4) reduces to
ensuring monotonic behavior of the effective potential in physically relevant cases.
3. A Sufficient Outward-Evolution Threshold
Balancing interior de Sitter acceleration (
) against exterior attraction (
) singles out
Proposition 1 (Sufficient outward evolution at zero inflow). Assume (so that M is time-independent), finite surface stresses with and , and (static patches). If for some the shell satisfies , then and the shell evolves outward on a finite interval beyond .
Proof.(sketch). Differentiate (
6) and evaluate at a point with
(for
). One has
using
. Writing
and using
from (
7), one finds
within the static domain
. Hence
increases for
in a neighborhood of
, implying outward evolution on a finite interval when
. □
Remark 1 (Dimensionless form and static-patch consistency).
Let . Then
Timelike consistency requires and (and, if , below the cosmological horizon), i.e. throughout [8].
Beyond providing control over the shell’s motion, the static patch framework also ensures that curvature remains bounded. This regularity is addressed next.
4. Boundedness of Curvature Scalars in the Covered Domain
A central question in collapse scenarios is whether curvature invariants diverge somewhere in the constructed spacetime, signaling a singularity. In this section, we show that the entire region covered by the thin-shell construction remains regular. This follows directly from the known properties of the chosen interior and exterior geometries, together with the well-controlled shell junction.
Proposition 2 (Bounded curvature). Let , with (i.e., the shell remains within the static patches), and assume that the shell surface stresses remain finite. Then all scalar curvature invariants are finite throughout the spacetime region covered by the construction.
Proof.(sketch). The interior region is a regular constant-curvature spacetime, specifically de Sitter, in which all scalar invariants are finite by construction. For example, the Kretschmann scalar is
In the exterior, which is Schwarzschild–de Sitter (SdS), the curvature is also fully determined and remains finite as long as the radius stays above the Schwarzschild horizon. The Kretschmann scalar is
which is manifestly bounded for
. □
At the shell, the metric is continuous, and any curvature singularities would arise only from distributional sources due to the jump in extrinsic curvature. However, as long as the shell energy density
and pressure
p remain finite, the distributional curvature remains controlled. This is a standard result from the Israel junction formalism [
7,
9].
Moreover, because we restrict to static patches with
, the shell does not cross into regions containing horizons or trapped surfaces. This ensures that the construction remains within a regular coordinate patch, and the entire covered spacetime is free of curvature singularities [
8].
Beyond geometric regularity, classical timelike shell models can also constrain persistent late-time features. In particular, a mass-scaled bound emerges from combining shell locality with redshift effects.
5. A Mass-Scaled Frequency Bound for Near-Shell Modes
Late-time observations often probe the presence of quasi-stationary or slowly decaying features near compact objects. In the present context, such features may be modeled as near-shell modes, and their observability at infinity is governed by redshift and confinement effects.
A minimal localization criterion for such modes is
, with
, ensuring that the mode is stored near the shell with meaningful structure. The Tolman redshift relation then yields the observed frequency at infinity:
where
is the local proper frequency near the shell [
4]. A full derivation and interpretation of this relation in the thin-shell context is given in
Appendix A.
Assuming
and defining the redshifted cyclic frequency
, we obtain the general mass-scaled expression:
For a Schwarzschild exterior (
), the right-hand side is maximized at
, yielding the compact upper bound:
This inequality provides a falsifiable, dimensionless constraint on persistent near-shell spectral features in the absence of exterior inflow and under classical GR assumptions. A robust observational violation of Equation (
10) would falsify the near-shell storage scenario as described.
6. Discussion and Outlook
6.1. Classical Content
Within classical GR and spherical symmetry, with a timelike thin shell evolving in static patches
, a constant-curvature (de Sitter) interior, and a post-transient zero-inflow regime (
), the analysis establishes three conservative statements. First, a closed-form
sufficient threshold for outward evolution, Equation (
8), emerges from balancing interior de Sitter acceleration against exterior attraction. Second, scalar curvature invariants remain bounded throughout the spacetime region covered by the construction (Proposition 2), ensuring regularity without intersecting exterior trapping surfaces. Third, a mass-scaled redshift bound limits persistent near-shell frequencies as observed at infinity, Equation (
10). These results derive directly from the Israel junction geometry and standard shell conservation laws, requiring no inputs beyond classical GR.
6.2. Energy Conditions
The de Sitter interior saturates the null and weak energy conditions but violates the strong energy condition, consistent with vacuum energy properties. The thin shell, governed by a linear surface equation of state
with
, satisfies the null, weak, and dominant energy conditions for physically admissible configurations (
,
). Under these assumptions, the standard singularity theorems [
14] are not activated within the domain, as the model avoids the focusing conditions that typically drive geodesic incompleteness [
8]. This highlights how controlled violations of energy conditions can yield regular classical outcomes in collapse scenarios [
15].
6.3. Thermodynamic Interpretation
Thermodynamic language serves as an
interpretive framework, distinct from the geometric derivations. In the static-patch, zero-inflow setup with fixed exterior mass
M, the shell radius
naturally links to a geometric area functional
(where
is an arbitrary scale). Outward evolution implies
without external inflow, mirroring the phenomenology of self-gravitating systems with negative specific heat capacity (
). In this scenario, larger shell configurations correspond to higher “entropy” states, consistent with the idea that energy loss promotes expansion rather than collapse. Crucially,
allows for local entropy production via
during the evolution, potentially reaching an entropic maximum before geometric horizon formation. No statistical entropy, temperature, or microstates are invoked; the analogy complements the horizon-free junction geometry, offering a classical lens on late-time stability [
16].
6.4. Scope and Limitations
The results are confined to classical GR, spherical symmetry, timelike shells in static patches, finite surface stresses (with
,
), and exclusion of the null limit [
10]. The threshold in Equation (
8) is
sufficient, not necessary. These restrictions ensure analytic control but limit applicability to highly idealized situations. Generalizations involving strong time dependence, rotation, or anisotropies are left for future work.
6.5. Observational Handle and Falsifiability
The mass–scaled inequality in Equation (
10) furnishes a null test: given an independent estimate of
M, any long–lived near–shell spectral feature measured at infinity should respect the bound. A robust, systematic violation would falsify the near–shell storage picture under the stated assumptions (timelike shell in static patches, negligible inflow, time–independent exterior mass). The bound also provides a practical template for targeted searches formulated directly in the mass–scaled variable
.
6.6. Outlook
Natural extensions could test the robustness of the classical findings while linking to observational strategies. Key directions include: (i) incorporating the null limit [
10] to model early, ultrarelativistic collapse phases, and exploring how lightlike shell dynamics might affect the outward-evolution threshold (Equation (
8)) and entropy production (
); (ii) studying perturbative stability against nonspherical fluctuations, particularly regarding their impact on the boundedness of curvature invariants; and (iii) allowing for time-dependent exterior mass
due to inflow or radiation, to explore how mass evolution modifies the frequency bound (Equation (
10)) and potentially introduces observational signatures. These avenues could connect the junction framework to broader spacetime symmetries, astrophysical realism, and alternative gravity theories.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Data Availability Statement
All derivations and analytical results in this work follow directly from the equations presented in the manuscript. No external datasets were used or generated.
Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflict of interest.
Use of Artificial Intelligence
The author used the OpenAI ChatGPT service (ScholarGPT via GPT-4o) to assist with language editing, formatting, and structural refinement of the manuscript. All scientific content, derivations, interpretations, and conclusions were conceived, written, and verified by the author.
Appendix A. Stationary Thin Shell and Tolman Potential (Proposition Section 5)
In a static geometry with Killing field
and lapse
, the Tolman relation gives
and
[
4,
17]. In the Newtonian limit,
reproduces the gravitational field. For a static thin shell,
is continuous across the shell while its normal derivative jumps by a surface term obtained from a pillbox integration of
, reproducing the thin-sheet jump (potential continuous, normal field discontinuous). In full GR this coincides with the static/Newtonian limit of Israel’s condition [
7,
9] and introduces no new dynamics.
Appendix B. Proof: Outward Evolution (Proposition 1)
Differentiate
in (
6). At
(for
),
Writing
and using
from (
7), one finds
throughout the static domain
. Therefore
increases for
in a neighborhood of
, implying outward evolution on a finite interval once
. Throughout this section, physically admissible shells with
are assumed, so that for
one indeed has
.
Appendix C. Proof: Bounded Curvature (Proposition 2)
Interior: constant curvature implies finite invariants, e.g.
. Exterior: for SdS,
hence bounded for
. Across the shell, the induced metric is continuous and distributional curvature is controlled by Israel’s condition with finite
[
7,
9]. Since
and we work in static patches, no exterior trapping surface intersects the covered spacetime [
8].
Appendix D. Proof of Frequency Bound (Equation (10))
We assume units
. A minimal near–shell storage criterion for quasi–trapped modes is
With
and Tolman redshift
, the observed (cyclic) frequency
satisfies
Multiplying by
and writing the exterior lapse
, we obtain the general mass–scaled expression
Appendix D.1. Schwarzschild Exterior (Lambda+=0)
Let
so that
. Define
Then (
A3) reads
. A straightforward maximization gives
, and
Therefore,
which is the bound (
10) in the main text.
Appendix D.2. Including a Cosmological Term
For , the same recipe applies on the static patch . Since the extra lowers at large R, the Schwarzschild value is an upper envelope; any tightens the bound.
Appendix D.3. Interpretation
Given an independent mass estimate M, any persistent late–time feature localized near the shell and measured at infinity must obey the mass–scaled inequality above. A robust violation would falsify the near–shell storage picture within the assumptions of the main text.
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