Since heat effects quantum entanglement, what is their relationship in a Black Hole?

Aug 15, 2024
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I have read comments on BHs being super-hot and super-cold. I'm curious about this interaction under all conditions, however the BH presents possibly the most extreme environment to analyze how temperatures effect entanglement, and what those consequences would be within the BH. I have no ideas on this, so comments would be appreciated.
 
If space is supposed to shrink as time moves toward a singularity (or whatever) in a black hole, that is the opposite of a fridge function.
I sometimes think that people tend to attribute qualities to a black hole which should really be assigned to the "other side"; the white hole side (the fridge side). WE are cooling :)
 
Aug 15, 2024
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Can you resolve that with this, found on the web?
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Yes, black holes are considered extremely cold, with temperatures near absolute zero, meaning they are essentially as cold as possible according to our current understanding of physics; the material falling into a black hole heats up significantly, but the black hole itself is incredibly cold.


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