Complexity and entanglement for thermofield double states
Motivated by holographic complexity proposals as novel probes of black hole spacetimes, we explore circuit complexity for thermofield double (TFD) states in free scalar quantum field theories using the Nielsen approach. For TFD states at t = 0 t = 0 , we show that the complexity of formation is prop...
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Published in | SciPost physics Vol. 6; no. 3; p. 034 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
SciPost
01.03.2019
|
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Motivated by holographic complexity proposals as novel probes of
black hole spacetimes, we explore circuit complexity for thermofield
double (TFD) states in free scalar quantum field theories using the
Nielsen approach. For TFD states at
t = 0
t
=
0
,
we show that the complexity of formation is proportional to the
thermodynamic entropy, in qualitative agreement with holographic
complexity proposals. For TFD states at
t>0
t
>
0
,
we demonstrate that the complexity evolves in time and saturates after a
time of the order of the inverse temperature. The latter feature, which
is in contrast with the results of holographic proposals, is due to the
Gaussian nature of the TFD state of the free bosonic QFT. A novel
technical aspect of our work is framing complexity calculations in the
language of covariance matrices and the associated symplectic
transformations, which provide a natural language for dealing with
Gaussian states. Furthermore, for free QFTs in 1+1 dimension, we compare
the dynamics of circuit complexity with the time dependence of the
entanglement entropy for simple bipartitions of TFDs. We relate our
results for the entanglement entropy to previous studies on
non-equilibrium entanglement evolution following quenches. We also
present a new analytic derivation of a logarithmic contribution due to
the zero momentum mode in the limit of vanishing mass for a subsystem
containing a single degree of freedom on each side of the TFD and argue
why a similar logarithmic growth should be present for larger
subsystems. |
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ISSN: | 2542-4653 2542-4653 |
DOI: | 10.21468/SciPostPhys.6.3.034 |