
Format results
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Oper and Integrable Systems
Peter Koroteev University of California, Berkeley
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Carrollian c-functions and flat space holographic RG flows
Daniel Grumiller Technische Universität Wien
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Spectral gap implies rapid mixing for commuting Hamiltonians
Angela Capel Cuevas University of Cambridge
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3 short stories about the quantum <-> gravity interface
Etera Livine French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
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Factorization homology in quantum topology
Lukas Woike University of Burgundy
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Probe Fundamental Physics via BH Perturbation Theory
Dongjun Li California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
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Quantum Steenrod operations of symplectic resolutions
Jae Hee Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
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Quantum cosmology from first principles: second thoughts
Lee Smolin Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
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Universal, deterministic, and exact protocol to reverse qubit-unitary and qubit-encoding isometry operations
Satoshi Yoshida University of Tokyo
We report a deterministic and exact protocol to reverse any unknown qubit-unitary and qubit-encoding isometry operations. To avoid known no-go results on universal deterministic exact unitary inversion, we consider the most general class of protocols transforming unknown unitary operations within the quantum circuit model, where the input unitary operation is called multiple times in sequence and fixed quantum circuits are inserted between the calls. In the proposed protocol, the input qubit-unitary operation is called 4 times to achieve the inverse operation, and the output state in an auxiliary system can be reused as a catalyst state in another run of the unitary inversion. This protocol only applies only for qubit-unitary operations, but we extend this protocol to any qubit-encoding isometry operations. We also present the simplification of the semidefinite programming for searching the optimal deterministic unitary inversion protocol for an arbitrary dimension presented by M. T. Quintino and D. Ebler [Quantum 6, 679 (2022)]. We show a method to reduce the large search space representing all possible protocols, which provides a useful tool for analyzing higher-order quantum transformations for unitary operations.
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Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/92900413520?pwd=a1JqU1IzMVdSRGQreWJIbEFCT2hWUT09
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Oper and Integrable Systems
Peter Koroteev University of California, Berkeley
I will introduce ($q$-)opers on a projective line in the presence of twists and singularities and will discuss the space of such opers. We will see how Bethe Ansatz equations for quantum spin chains and energy level equations of classical soluble models of Calogero-Ruijsenaars type naturally appear from the oper construction. Both can also be described in terms of so-called $QQ$-systems, which have their origins in algebra and representation theory. Our construction is universal and works for any simple, simply-connected complex Lie group $G$.
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Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94393767928?pwd=Qkg2eG5CME5sQjNEV2lDVVNyMktDQT09
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Carrollian c-functions and flat space holographic RG flows
Daniel Grumiller Technische Universität Wien
We discuss c-functions and their holographic counterpart for 2d field theories with Carrollian conformal fixed points in the UV and the IR, and construct asymptotically flat domain wall solutions of 3d Einstein-dilaton gravity that model holographic RG flows. arXiv: 2309.11539
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Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94223624920?pwd=T3pxOGxnRVFVbGVnZnRuZ2NSTm8wZz09
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Spectral gap implies rapid mixing for commuting Hamiltonians
Angela Capel Cuevas University of Cambridge
Quantum systems typically reach thermal equilibrium rather quickly when coupled to an external thermal environment. The usual way of bounding the speed of this process is by estimating the spectral gap of the dissipative generator. However, the gap, by itself, does not always yield a reasonable estimate for the thermalization time in many-body systems: without further structure, a uniform lower bound on it only constraints the thermalization time to be polynomially growing with system size. In this talk, we will discuss that for all 2-local models with commuting Hamiltonians, the thermalization time that one can estimate from the gap is in fact much smaller than direct estimates suggest: at most logarithmic in the system size. This yields the so-called rapid mixing of dissipative dynamics. We will show this result by proving that a finite gap directly implies a lower bound on the modified logarithmic Sobolev inequality (MLSI) for the class of models we consider. The result is particularly relevant for 1D systems, for which we can prove rapid thermalization with a constant decay rate, giving a qualitative improvement over all previous results. It also applies to hypercubic lattices, graphs with exponential growth rate, and trees with sufficiently fast decaying correlations in the Gibbs state. This has consequences for the rate of thermalization towards Gibbs states, and also for their relevant Wasserstein distances and transportation cost inequalities.
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Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/91315419731?pwd=TGpFTjlHWEJZVWZkdTh6bDFKMjhQZz09
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The dipole tension
Roya Mohayaee Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris
Standard model of cosmology is based on the cosmological principle. The cosmological principle states that the Universe is statistically homogeneous and isotropic on large scales. Is this hypothesis supported by the observations ? After a historical survey of the field, I shall use the high redshift data from radio galaxies and quasars to show that the early Universe does not seem to be isotropic and the rest frame of cosmic microwave background radiation does not coincide with the rest frame of distant sources. I shall also demonstrate that the cosmological principle is violated at a statistical significance of over 5-sigma.
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Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94290315794?pwd=STFpalNNb1NNUHNPNWcvZlkreWNpZz09
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3 short stories about the quantum <-> gravity interface
Etera Livine French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS)
Building on the fact that quantum uncertainty is a dynamical degree of freedom in itself in quantum mechanics, I will start with the remark that its evolution can provide a notion of intrinsic clock. To illustrate the non-triviality of this idea, we’ll check the dynamics of the uncertainty if gravitizing quantum mechanics into a non-linear Schrödinger equation, and will see that it (surprisingly?) follows the same trajectories as planetary orbits. A third thread will come from the black hole mini-superspace in general relativity. We will see that, assuming that the quantization preserves all the symmetries of the theory, universal quantum gravity corrections can also be written as a non-linear Schrödinger equation, leading to a non-trivial evolution of the “classicality” of black hole wave-packets along the radial coordinate.
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Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95808416532?pwd=cHJnVXpzdDd3eXdFbUlMamFsMFV3UT09
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Probe Fundamental Physics via BH Perturbation Theory
Dongjun Li California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
Anticipating the launch of several next-generation gravitational wave (GW) detectors in the 2030s, we will be able to more precisely measure spacetime ripples from binary black hole (BH) mergers in a larger parameter space. The forthcoming data will require us to develop more accurate predictions of GWs not only in General Relativity (GR) but also in theories beyond GR and diverse astrophysical environments. Black hole perturbation theory is a cornerstone for making these predictions. In recent years, there have been extensive studies of perturbations of BHs in theories beyond GR, but only for non-rotating or slowly rotating BHs. In this talk, I will present a new formalism, based on Teukolsky's seminal work in the 1970s, to study perturbations of BHs with arbitrary spin in beyond-GR theories and in more complicated astrophysical environments. I will first discuss how to derive a modified Teukolsky equation for BHs deforming perturbatively from their counterparts in GR due to beyond-GR or environmental effects and the necessary techniques to evaluate this equation. Subsequently, I will discuss some applications of this formalism. Specifically, I will prescribe utilizing this formalism to investigate the isospectrality breaking of quasinormal modes (QNMs) in beyond-GR theories, compute the QNM frequency shifts in some specific theories, and efficiently extract these shifts from observation data. Furthermore, I will also show how to apply this formalism to study extreme mass-ratio inspirals beyond GR.
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Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/99282316326?pwd=REtBSFUxdlgxUGVwZFFvVEVBVnFTUT09
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Quantum Steenrod operations of symplectic resolutions
Jae Hee Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
We study the quantum connection in positive characteristic for conical symplectic resolutions. We conjecture the equivalence of the p-curvature of such connections with (equivariant generalizations of) quantum Steenrod operations of Fukaya and Wilkins, which are endomorphisms of mod p quantum cohomology deforming the Steenrod operations. The conjecture is verified in a wide range of examples, including the Springer resolution, thereby providing a geometric interpretation of the p-curvature and a full computation of quantum Steenrod operations. The key ingredients are a new compatibility relation between the quantum Steenrod operations and the shift operators, and structural results for the mod p quantum connection recently obtained by Etingof--Varchenko.
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Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/91010341249?pwd=QXJuMlJrWWd0dHpPdUpDUGVqVmYvZz09
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Hamiltonian supermaps: Higher-order quantum transformations of unknown Hamiltonian dynamics
Mio Murao University of Tokyo
Supermaps are higher-order transformations taking maps as input. We consider quantum algorithms implementing supermaps for the input given by unknown Hamiltonian dynamics, which can be regarded as infinitely divisible unitary operations. We first show a quantum algorithm that approximately but universally transforms black-box Hamiltonian dynamics into controlled Hamiltonian dynamics utilizing a higher-order transformation called neutralization. Then, we present another universal algorithm that efficiently simulates linear transformations of any Hamiltonian consisting of a polynomial number of terms in system size, using only controlled-Pauli gates and time-correlated randomness. This algorithm for implementing Hamiltonian supermaps is an instance of quantum functional programming, where the desired function is specified as a concatenation of higher-order quantum transformations. As examples, we demonstrate the simulation of negative time-evolution and time-reversal, and perform a Hamiltonian learning task.
References:Q. Dong, S. Nakayama, A. Soeda and M. Murao, arXiv:1911.01645v3
T. Odake, Hlér Kristjánsson, A. Soeda M. Murao, arXiv:2303.09788---
Zoom Link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/94278362588?pwd=MGszYk9uN1A3K1RTOVhYSGpkL1FQdz09
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Quantum cosmology from first principles: second thoughts
Lee Smolin Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
I argue that the answer is yes, by reviewing the history and current status of such a theory. Since 1982, I have been developing a series of such theories, beginning in 1982 with an N --> infinity limit of 2+1 dimensional matrix model (the IAS model), through another N --> infinity, T --> 0 limit of a BFSS model. During this time our work was complemented by Adler's Trace model and others.
Beginning in 2012, Cortes and I developed a different approach to an relational quantum cosmology by adding intrinsic energy momentum to Sorkin et al's causal set models. The addition of energy- momentum as intrinsic variables opens up a new mechanism for the emergence of space, and spacetime, plus interacting relativistic particles. Note that the warm phase is purely algebraic, you need no prior existence of any space to get other dimensions to emerge. In 2021 I discovered how to derive quantum non-relativistic many body theory from what has since been called the Causal Theory of Views. Finally in papers since we report progress on the construction of special and general relativistic Causal Theory of Views.
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Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95891848248?pwd=TUpWK2RWbU9GTGxZS1lMeS81QWp1dz09
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What exactly does Bekenstein Bound?
Jinzhao Wang ETH Zurich
The Bekenstein bound posits a maximum entropy for matter with finite energy confined to a spacetime region. It is often interpreted as a fundamental limit on the information that can be stored by physical objects. In this work, we test this interpretation by asking whether the Bekenstein bound imposes constraints on a channel's communication capacity, a context in which information can be given a mathematically rigorous and operationally meaningful definition. We first derive a bound on the accessible information and demonstrate that the Bekenstein bound constrains the decoding instead of the encoding. Then we study specifically the Unruh channel that describes a stationary Alice exciting different species of free scalar fields to send information to an accelerating Bob, who is therefore confined to a Rindler wedge and exposed to the noise of Unruh radiation. We show that the classical and quantum capacities of the Unruh channel obey the Bekenstein bound. In contrast, the entanglement-assisted capacity is as large as the input size even at arbitrarily high Unruh temperatures. This reflects that the Bekenstein bound can be violated if we do not properly constrain the decoding operation in accordance with the bound. We further find that the Unruh channel can transmit a significant number of zero-bits, which are communication resources that can be used as minimal substitutes for the classical/quantum bits needed for many primitive information processing protocols, such as dense coding and teleportation. We show that the Unruh channel has a large zero-bit capacity even at high temperatures, which underpins the capacity boost with entanglement assistance and allows Alice and Bob to perform quantum identification. Therefore, unlike classical bits and qubits, zero-bits and their associated information processing capability are not constrained by the Bekenstein bound. (This talk is based on the recent work (https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.07436) with Patrick Hayden.)
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Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/98778081764?pwd=WktjNU84R3NWRXNyVmt1eDVMK2JnUT09