Opzioni
Entanglement, symmetries and interfaces in one-dimensional quantum systems
CAPIZZI, LUCA
2023-09-25
Abstract
Quantum systems display counterintuitive features, escaping our everyday-life intuition,
whose origin is related to entanglement. This phenomenon arises when different parts of the
same systems display correlations, which cannot be understood via classical mechanics, and
they are dubbed as quantum. To characterize the correlations above, it is necessary to find
good entanglement measures which are able to capture quantitatively the quantum features
of a given system. This motivates the investigation and the computation of quantities such
as the von Neumann entropy of regions, which provides information about how a system is
entangled.
Our focus is quantum one-dimensional systems close to their critical point, where quantum
correlations are enhanced, and a characterization via Quantum Field Theory (QFT) can be
provided. In particular, we aim to understand the role of symmetries and localized defects on
the entanglement properties. Those aspects display an intimate connection. First, via replica
trick, the entropy is expressed via a replica permutation symmetry. Then, single defects
break symmetries that are present in the corresponding homogeneous systems. Due to these
reasons, the characterization of symmetry actions on subsystems can be viewed as a unifying
framework for quantifying entanglement.
We split this thesis into two parts. The first part is devoted to the symmetry-resolved
entanglement. We first compute it in massive integrable field theories, giving analytical predictions
for free fermions/bosons and the 3-state Potts model. For instance, we characterize
the universal corrections to area law via form factor bootstrap. We also study excited states
of field theories, and we characterize both low-energy states of Conformal Field Theory (CFT)
and quasi-particle states.
The second part deals with quantum correlations across defects. We provide a CFT framework
to compute Rényi entropy and negativity in the ground state of conformal junctions,
giving analytical predictions for free fermions and bosons. We find logarithmic growth of
the entanglement measures above, and we relate the universal prefactor to the boundary
conditions, encoded in a boundary scattering matrix. Then, we focus on the entanglement
dynamics, and we study the time evolution of correlations for two paradigmatic classes of
quench protocols. For a global quench, we find a linear growth of entropy across the defect
whose slope is computed both in CFT, for thermal states, and for free fermions, via a
modification of the quasi-particle picture. For a domain wall melting protocol, also known
as inhomogeneous quench, we find that, while local observables are easily understood via
hydrodynamics and local generalized Gibbs ensembles, the same is not true for the entropy.
In contrast, by employing the quasi-particle picture, we provide precise predictions for the
dynamics of entanglement, revealing the influence of long-range correlations between points
that are specular with respect to the defect.
Diritti
open access