
Search results
Format results
-
-
-
-
Einstein Telescope: A look at the dawn of the Universe
Fernando Ferroni -
-
-
Exploring Quantum Many-Body Scars: Anomalies to Thermalization in Quantum Systems
Julia Wildeboer Brookhaven National Laboratory
-
-
-
Lecture - Mathematical Physics, PHYS 777-
Mykola Semenyakin Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
Fault Tolerance via Mixed-State Phases
Amirreza Negari Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
-
-
Quantum Information-Inspired Tests of Quantum Gravity
Vlatko VedralI plan to review several ways of testing if the gravitational field has quantum aspects in the low energy regime. I explain why the hybrid (half quantum/half classical) models are inadequate and how they could be ruled out. Furthermore, I maintain that there is no prima facie reason to expect problems when quantizing gravity in the linear regime; I summarise the main perceived difficulties only to dismiss them as irrelevant. Going beyond the linear regime is challenging in the lab, and one might have to look towards astrophysics and cosmology of the early universe instead. Finally, many interesting features of quantum field theory could be explored in the low-energy regime that may not necessarily be specific to gravity.
-
-
Einstein Telescope: A look at the dawn of the Universe
Fernando FerroniGravitational waves were detected in 2015 after 100 years of their prediction. Coalescence of black holes and neutron stars have been studied giving birth to a new way of studying our Universe. The coincidence of the gravitational signal with a gamma ray burst has been identified as the beginning of multi-messenger astronomy. In order to move from the limited statistics, allowed by the actually running interferometers (LIGO and VIRGO), to a huge sample a new generation of detectors has to be designed , built and operated. Einstein Telescope is the project for a third generation detector, supported by a large European collaboration. It is going to be formed by a combination of a Low Frequency Cryogenic interferometer and an High Frequency high laser power interferometer both located underground in order to minimise the noise. Laser technology, seismic noise attenuation, quantim squeezing are a few of the keys to success. The experiment is going to produce results in several field of research like astronomy, astrophysics, nuclear physics, cosmology. It is going to be in competition and cooperation with the US project Cosmic Explorer.
-
Low-overhead fault-tolerant quantum computing with high-rate qLDPC codes
Xian QuHigh-rate quantum low-density parity-check (qLDPC) codes offer significantly lower encoding overhead compared to their topological counterparts by relaxing locality constraints. However, achieving full-fledged logical computation with these codes in physical systems with low space-time costs remains a formidable challenge. In the first part of this talk, I will provide an overview of recent advancements in implementing qLDPC codes as quantum memories on realistic platforms, such as reconfigurable atom arrays. Next, I will present a new scheme for performing parallelizable and locally addressable logical operations on homological product codes. This scheme extends the transversal CNOT gate from two identical CSS codes to two distinct, yet structurally similar, qLDPC codes, enabling efficient local addressing of collectively encoded information. We demonstrate that this approach achieves lower overhead in not only the space- but also the overall space-time overhead compared to surface-code-based computations. Finally, I will discuss new strategies for achieving highly space-time-efficient computations with qLDPC codes by leveraging algorithm-specific fault tolerance, designing tailored protocols for structured quantum algorithms.
-
The BV-Logic of Spacetime Interventions
James HeffordI will give a general method for producing a process theory of local spacetime events and higher-order transformations from any base process theory of first-order maps. This process theory models events as intervention-context pairs, uniting the local actions by agents with the structure of the spacetime around them. I will show how this theory is richer than a standard process theory by permitting additional ways of composing agents beyond the usual tensor product, thereby capturing various strengths of possible spatio-temporal correlations. I will also explain the connection between these compositions and the logic "system BV".
-
Exploring Quantum Many-Body Scars: Anomalies to Thermalization in Quantum Systems
Julia Wildeboer Brookhaven National Laboratory
Quantum many-body scars (QMBS) have emerged as a captivating anomaly within the landscape of quantum physics, challenging the conventional expectations of the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH). According to ETH, an isolated quantum system is expected to evolve toward thermal equilibrium, with local observables equilibrating to values predicted by statistical mechanics, independent of the initial state of the system. However, QMBS present a remarkable exception by exhibiting resistance to thermalization, thus maintaining quantum information for unexpectedly long durations.
This colloquium will delve into the intriguing realm of QMBS, highlighting their pivotal role in advancing our understanding of quantum thermalization and their potential applications in quantum dynamics and technology. The discussion will cover recent theoretical and experimental progress in identifying systems that display these scars, focusing on their properties and the mechanisms by which they arise.
A specific area of interest is the construction of QMBS states emerging from Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) states in bilayer systems, where each layer is maximally entangled. We will explore applications of this framework in quantum dimer models, examining various features of the bilayer model that contribute to the emergence of these states. Furthermore, if time allows, the talk will extend to systems of itinerant bosons, demonstrating how an infinite tower of many-body scar states can manifest in bilayer Bose-Hubbard models with charge conservation. We will discuss the implications of these findings in the context of recent experimental advancements, considering how these theoretical constructs relate to physically realizable systems in laboratory settings. -
OGRePy and Time Travel Paradoxes
Barak Shoshany Brock University
Part I: OGRePy: Object-Oriented General Relativity in Python I will present a detailed introduction to my new Python package, OGRePy: (O)bject-Oriented (G)eneral (Re)lativity for (Py)thon, a port of my popular Mathematica package OGRe, which is used by many researchers in general relativity and related areas. I will demonstrate the package's usage and features, including its ability to manipulate tensors of arbitrary rank using an intuitive interface, and calculate arbitrary tensor formulas involving any combination of addition, multiplication, trace, contraction, and partial and covariant derivatives - while automatically figuring out the proper index configuration and coordinate system to use for each tensor, eliminating user error. Part II: Time Travel Paradoxes and Entangled Timelines If time travel is possible, it seems that it would inevitably lead to paradoxes, indicating an internal inconsistency in our current theories of nature. Can these paradoxes be resolved by new laws of physics, or perhaps even existing ones? I will first review the different types of time travel paradoxes and their proposed resolutions. Then I will present the results of my 3 recent papers (1911.11590, 2110.02448, 2303.07635) discussing different aspects of time travel paradoxes from the perspectives of both general relativity and quantum mechanics. I will argue that generic time travel paradoxes can only be resolved using the concept of parallel timelines, and suggest possibilities for how such timelines may manifest themselves. -
Uniqueness of bipartite and multipartite quantum state over time
Recent efforts to formulate a unified, causally neutral approach to quantum theory have highlighted the need for a framework treating spatial and temporal correlations on an equal footing. Building on this motivation, we propose operationally inspired axioms for quantum states over time, demonstrating that, unlike earlier approaches, these axioms yield a unique quantum state over time that is valid across both bipartite and multipartite spacetime scenarios. In particular, we show that the Fullwood-Parzygnat state over time uniquely satisfies these axioms, thus unifying bipartite temporal correlations and extending seamlessly to any number of temporal points. In particular, we identify two simple assumptions—linearity in the initial state and a quantum analog of conditionability—that single out a multipartite extension of bipartite quantum states over time, giving rise to a canonical generalization of Kirkwood-Dirac type quasi-probability distributions. This result provides a new characterization of quantum Markovianity, advancing our understanding of quantum correlations across both space and time.
-
Lecture - Mathematical Physics, PHYS 777-
Mykola Semenyakin Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
Fault Tolerance via Mixed-State Phases
Amirreza Negari Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
In this talk, I will explain the concept of fault tolerance, which ensures reliable quantum computation. Building on recent advancements in mixed-state phases of matter, I introduce a new diagnostic called the spacetime Markov length. The divergence of this length scale signals the intrinsic breakdown of fault tolerance.
-
Applications and prospects of Lorentzian path integrals in quantum gravity
Johanna Borissova Perimeter Institute
Lorentzian path integrals exhibit profoundly different properties from Euclidean ones due to the oscillatory integrand which weighs different configurations through interference. Key troubles encountered in Euclidean quantum gravity are the conformal factor problem of Euclidean quantum GR and divergences due to spike configurations in Euclidean quantum Regge calculus. The first part of this talk will focus on how these troubles are resolved in Lorentzian quantum Regge calculus. I will emphasize the unambiguous choice of contour for the integral over the conformal mode in a saddle-point expansion and furthermore show that bulk-length expectation values are finite for spike and spine configurations away from the classical regime. The second part of this talk will focus on properties of Lorentzian path integrals beyond GR. I will illustrate that higher-derivative and non-local actions can be expected to suppress spacetime configurations with curvature singularities. Finally, I will revisit the long-standing question of global symmetries in quantum gravity by providing examples for non-local actions designed to suppress global-symmetry-violating black-hole configurations in the Lorentzian path integral.