Topological entropies in the classical toric code model - An information theory perspective
APA
Helmes, J. (2015). Topological entropies in the classical toric code model - An information theory perspective. Perimeter Institute. https://pirsa.org/15110092
MLA
Helmes, Johannes. Topological entropies in the classical toric code model - An information theory perspective. Perimeter Institute, Nov. 17, 2015, https://pirsa.org/15110092
BibTex
@misc{ pirsa_PIRSA:15110092, doi = {10.48660/15110092}, url = {https://pirsa.org/15110092}, author = {Helmes, Johannes}, keywords = {Condensed Matter}, language = {en}, title = {Topological entropies in the classical toric code model - An information theory perspective}, publisher = {Perimeter Institute}, year = {2015}, month = {nov}, note = {PIRSA:15110092 see, \url{https://pirsa.org}} }
Concepts of information theory are increasingly used to characterize collective phenomena in condensed matter systems, such as the use of entanglement entropies to identify emergent topological order in interacting quantum many-body systems. Here we employ classical variants of these concepts, in particular Renyi entropies and their associated mutual information, to identify topological order in classical systems.
Like for their quantum counterparts, the presence of topological order can be identified in such classical systems via a universal, subleading contribution to the prevalent volume and boundary laws of the classical Renyi entropies. We demonstrate that an additional subleading O(1) contribution generically arises for all Renyi entropies S(n) with n ≥ 2 when driving the system towards a phase transition, e.g. into a conventionally ordered phase. This additional subleading term, which we dub connectivity contribution, tracks back to partial subsystem ordering and is proportional to the number of connected parts in a given bipartition. Notably, the Levin-Wen summation scheme – typically used to extract the topological contribution to the Renyi entropies – does not fully eliminate this additional connectivity contribution in this classical context. This indicates that the distillation of topological order from Renyi entropies requires an additional level of scrutiny to distinguish topological from non-topological O(1) contributions. This is also the case for quantum systems, for which we discuss which entropies are sensitive to these connectivity contributions. We showcase these findings by extensive numerical simulations of a classical variant of the toric code model, for which we study the stability of topological order in the presence of a magnetic field and at finite temperatures from a Renyi entropy perspective.