@phdthesis{Weigel2023, author = {Weigel, Anna-Lena}, title = {Spacetime Geometry from Quantum Circuits and Berry Phases in AdS/CFT}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-32748}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-327481}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {In this thesis, I establish new relations between quantum information measures in a two-dimensional CFT and geometric objects in a three-dimensional AdS space employing the AdS/CFT correspondence. I focus on two quantum information measures: the computational cost of quantum circuits in a CFT and Berry phases in two entangled CFTs. In particular, I show that these quantities are associated with geometric objects in the dual AdS space.}, subject = {AdS-CFT-Korrespondenz}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Gerbershagen2022, author = {Gerbershagen, Marius}, title = {Quantum information and the emergence of spacetime in the AdS/CFT correspondence}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-28199}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-281997}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {This thesis studies connections between quantum information measures and geometric features of spacetimes within the AdS/CFT correspondence. These studies are motivated by the idea that spacetime can be thought of as an effect emerging from an underlying entanglement structure in the AdS/CFT correspondence. In particular, I study generalized entanglement measures in two-dimensional conformal field theories and their holographic duals. Unlike the ordinary entanglement entropy of a spatial subregion typically used in the AdS/CFT context, the generalization considered here measures correlations between different fields as well as between spatial degrees of freedom. I present a new gauge invariant definition of the generalized entanglement entropy applicable to both mixed and pure states as well as explicit results for thermal states of the S_N-orbifold theory of the D1/D5 system. Along the way, I develop computation techniques for conformal blocks on the torus and apply them to the calculation of the ordinary entanglement entropy for large central charge CFTs at finite size and finite temperature. The generalized Ryu-Takayanagi formula arising from these studies provides further support for the idea that entanglement and geometry are intrinsically linked in AdS/CFT. The results show that the holographic dual to the generalized entanglement entropy given by the length of a geodesic winding around black hole horizons or naked singularities probes subregions of spacetime that are inaccessible to Ryu-Takayanagi surfaces, thereby solving the puzzle of how these features of the spacetime are encoded in the boundary theory. Furthermore, I investigate quantum circuits embedded in two-dimensional conformal field theories as well as computational complexity measures therein. These investigations are motivated by conjectures relating computational complexity in conformal field theories to geometric features of black hole geometries. In this thesis, I study quantum circuits built up from conformal transformations. I investigate examples of computational complexity measures in these circuits related to geometric actions on coadjoint orbits of the Virasoro group and to the Fubini-Study metric. I then work out relations between these computational complexity measures and the dual gravitational theory. Moreover, I construct a bulk dual to the circuits in consideration and use this construction to study geometric realizations of computational complexity measures from first principles. The results of this part on the one hand rule out some possibilities for dual realizations of computational complexity in two-dimensional CFTs put forward in previous work while on the other hand providing a new robust dual realization of a computational complexity measure based on the Fubini-Study distance.}, subject = {AdS-CFT-Korrespondenz}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Fries2022, author = {Fries, Pascal}, title = {On the r{\^o}le of entanglement in quantum field theory}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-25846}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-258465}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {In this thesis, I study entanglement in quantum field theory, using methods from operator algebra theory. More precisely, the thesis covers original research on the entanglement properties of the free fermionic field. After giving a pedagogical introduction to algebraic methods in quantum field theory, as well as the modular theory of Tomita-Takesaki and its relation to entanglement, I present a coherent framework that allows to solve Tomita-Takesaki theory for free fermionic fields in any number of dimensions. Subsequently, I use the derived machinery on the free massless fermion in two dimensions, where the formulae can be evaluated analytically. In particular, this entails the derivation of the resolvent of restrictions of the propagator, by means of solving singular integral equations. In this way, I derive the modular flow, modular Hamiltonian, modular correlation function, R\'enyi entanglement entropy, von-Neumann entanglement entropy, relative entanglement entropy, and mutual information for multi-component regions. All of this is done for the vacuum and thermal states, both on the infinite line and the circle with (anti-)periodic boundary conditions. Some of these results confirm previous results from the literature, such as the modular Hamiltonian and entanglement entropy in the vacuum state. The non-universal solutions for modular flow, modular correlation function, and R\'enyi entropy, however are new, in particular at finite temperature on the circle. Additionally, I show how boundaries of spacetime affect entanglement, as well as how one can define relative (entanglement) entropy and mutual information in theories with superselection rules. The findings regarding modular flow in multi-component regions can be summarised as follows: In the non-degenerate vacuum state, modular flow is multi-local, in the sense that it mixes the field operators along multiple trajectories, with one trajectory per component. This was already known from previous literature but is presented here in a more explicit form. In particular, I present the exact solution for the dynamics of the mixing process. What was not previously known at all, is that the modular flow of the thermal state on the circle is infinitely multi-local even for a connected region, in the sense that it mixes the field along an infinite, discretely distributed set, of trajectories. In the limit of high temperatures, all trajectories but the local one are pushed towards the boundary of the region, where their amplitude is damped exponentially, leaving only the local result. At low temperatures, on the other hand, these trajectories distribute densely in the region to either---for anti-periodic boundary conditions---cancel, or---for periodic boundary conditions---recover the non-local contribution due to the degenerate vacuum state. Proceeding to spacetimes with boundaries, I show explicitly how the presence of a boundary implies entanglement between the two components of the Dirac spinor. By computing the mutual information between the components inside a connected region, I show quantitatively that this entanglement decreases as an inverse square law at large distances from the boundary. In addition, full conformal symmetry (which is explicitly broken due to the presence of a boundary) is recovered from the exact solution for modular flow, far away from the boundary. As far as I know, all of these results are new, although related results were published by another group during the final stage of this thesis. Finally, regarding relative entanglement entropy in theories with superselection sectors, I introduce charge and flux resolved relative entropies, which are novel measures for the distinguishability of states, incorporating a charge operator, central to the algebra of observables. While charge resolved relative entropy has the interpretation of being a ``distinguishability per charge sector'', I argue that it is physically meaningless without placing a cutoff, due to infinite short-distance entanglement. Flux resolved relative entropy, on the other hand, overcomes this problem by inserting an Aharonov-Bohm flux and thus passing to a variant of the grand canonical ensemble. It takes a well defined value, even without putting a cutoff, and I compute its value between various states of the free massless fermion on the line, the charge operator being the total fermion number.}, subject = {Quanteninformation}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Abt2019, author = {Abt, Raimond}, title = {Implementing Aspects of Quantum Information into the AdS/CFT Correspondence}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-18801}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-188012}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In recent years many discoveries have been made that reveal a close relation between quantum information and geometry in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence. In this duality between a conformal quantum field theory (CFT) and a theory of gravity on Anti-de Sitter spaces (AdS) quantum information quantities in CFT are associated with geometric objects in AdS. Subject of this thesis is the examination of this intriguing property of AdS/CFT. We study two central elements of quantum information: subregion complexity -- which is a measure for the effort required to construct a given reduced state -- and the modular Hamiltonian -- which is given by the logarithm of a considered reduced state. While a clear definition for subregion complexity in terms of unitary gates exists for discrete systems, a rigorous formulation for quantum field theories is not known. In AdS/CFT, subregion complexity is proposed to be related to certain codimension one regions on the AdS side. The main focus of this thesis lies on the examination of such candidates for gravitational duals of subregion complexity. We introduce the concept of \textit{topological complexity}, which considers subregion complexity to be given by the integral over the Ricci scalar of codimension one regions in AdS. The Gauss-Bonnet theorem provides very general expressions for the topological complexity of CFT\(_2\) states dual to global AdS\(_3\), BTZ black holes and conical defects. In particular, our calculations show that the topology of the considered codimension one bulk region plays an essential role for topological complexity. Moreover, we study holographic subregion complexity (HSRC), which associates the volume of a particular codimension one bulk region with subregion complexity. We derive an explicit field theory expression for the HSRC of vacuum states. The formulation of HSRC in terms of field theory quantities may allow to investigate whether this bulk object indeed provides a concept of subregion complexity on the CFT side. In particular, if this turns out to be the case, our expression for HSRC may be seen as a field theory definition of subregion complexity. We extend our expression to states dual to BTZ black holes and conical defects. A further focus of this thesis is the modular Hamiltonian of a family of states \(\rho_\lambda\) depending on a continuous parameter \(\lambda\). Here \(\lambda\) may be associated with the energy density or the temperature, for instance. The importance of the modular Hamiltonian for quantum information is due to its contribution to relative entropy -- one of the very few objects in quantum information with a rigorous definition for quantum field theories. The first order contribution in \(\tilde{\lambda}=\lambda-\lambda_0\) of the modular Hamiltonian to the relative entropy between \(\rho_\lambda\) and a reference state \(\rho_{\lambda_0}\) is provided by the first law of entanglement. We study under which circumstances higher order contributions in \(\tilde{\lambda}\) are to be expected. We show that for states reduced to two entangling regions \(A\), \(B\) the modular Hamiltonian of at least one of these regions is expected to provide higher order contributions in \(\tilde{\lambda}\) to the relative entropy if \(A\) and \(B\) saturate the Araki-Lieb inequality. The statement of the Araki-Lieb inequality is that the difference between the entanglement entropies of \(A\) and \(B\) is always smaller or equal to the entanglement entropy of the union of \(A\) and \(B\). Regions for which this inequality is saturated are referred to as entanglement plateaux. In AdS/CFT the relation between geometry and quantum information provides many examples for entanglement plateaux. We apply our result to several of them, including large intervals for states dual to BTZ black holes and annuli for states dual to black brane geometries.}, subject = {AdS-CFT-Korrespondenz}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Rothe2015, author = {Rothe, Dietrich Gernot}, title = {Spin Transport in Topological Insulators and Geometrical Spin Control}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-125628}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {In the field of spintronics, spin manipulation and spin transport are the main principles that need to be implemented. The main focus of this thesis is to analyse semiconductor systems where high fidelity in these principles can be achieved. To this end, we use numerical methods for precise results, supplemented by simpler analytical models for interpretation. The material system of 2D topological insulators, HgTe/CdTe quantum wells, is interesting not only because it provides a topologically distinct phase of matter, physically manifested in its protected transport properties, but also since within this system, ballistic transport of high quality can be realized, with Rashba spin-orbit coupling and electron densities that are tunable by electrical gating. Extending the Bernvevig-Hughes-Zhang model for 2D topological insulators, we derive an effective four-band model including Rashba spin-orbit terms due to an applied potential that breaks the spatial inversion symmetry of the quantum well. Spin transport in this system shows interesting physics because the effects of Rashba spin-orbit terms and the intrinsic Dirac-like spin-orbit terms compete. We show that the resulting spin Hall signal can be dominated by the effect of Rashba spin-orbit coupling. Based on spin splitting due to the latter, we propose a beam splitter setup for all-electrical generation and detection of spin currents. Its working principle is similar to optical birefringence. In this setup, we analyse spin current and spin polarization signals of different spin vector components and show that large in-plane spin polarization of the current can be obtained. Since spin is not a conserved quantity of the model, we first analyse the transport of helicity, a conserved quantity even in presence of Rashba spin-orbit terms. The polarization defined in terms of helicity is related to in-plane polarization of the physical spin. Further, we analyse thermoelectric transport in a setup showing the spin Hall effect. Due to spin-orbit coupling, an applied temperature gradient generates a transverse spin current, i.e. a spin Nernst effect, which is related to the spin Hall effect by a Mott-like relation. In the metallic energy regimes, the signals are qualitatively explained by simple analytic models. In the insulating regime, we observe a spin Nernst signal that originates from the finite-size induced overlap of edge states. In the part on methods, we discuss two complementary methods for construction of effective semiconductor models, the envelope function theory and the method of invariants. Further, we present elements of transport theory, with some emphasis on spin-dependent signals. We show the connections of the adiabatic theorem of quantum mechanics to the semiclassical theory of electronic transport and to the characterization of topological phases. Further, as application of the adiabatic theorem to a control problem, we show that universal control of a single spin in a heavy-hole quantum dot is experimentally realizable without breaking time reversal invariance, but using a quadrupole field which is adiabatically changed as control knob. For experimental realization, we propose a GaAs/GaAlAs quantum well system.}, subject = {Elektronischer Transport}, language = {en} }