13,313 research outputs found
On the sharpness of the zero-entropy-density conjecture
The zero-entropy-density conjecture states that the entropy density, defined
as the limit of S(N)/N at infinity, vanishes for all translation-invariant pure
states on the spin chain. Or equivalently, S(N), the von Neumann entropy of
such a state restricted to N consecutive spins, is sublinear. In this paper it
is proved that this conjecture cannot be sharpened, i.e., translation-invariant
states give rise to arbitrary fast sublinear entropy growth. The proof is
constructive, and is based on a class of states derived from quasifree states
on a CAR algebra. The question whether the entropy growth of pure quasifree
states can be arbitrary fast sublinear was first raised by Fannes et al. [J.
Math. Phys. 44, 6005 (2003)]. In addition to the main theorem it is also shown
that the entropy asymptotics of all pure shift-invariant nontrivial quasifree
states is at least logarithmic.Comment: 11 pages, references added, corrected typo
Entanglement entropy and quantum field theory: a non-technical introduction
In these proceedings we give a pedagogical and non-technical introduction to
the Quantum Field Theory approach to entanglement entropy. Particular attention
is devoted to the one space dimensional case, with a linear dispersion
relation, that, at a quantum critical point, can be effectively described by a
two-dimensional Conformal Field Theory.Comment: 10 Pages, 2 figures. Talk given at the conference "Entanglement in
Physical and information sciences", Centro Ennio de Giorgi, Pisa, December
200
Distinguishing between Neutrinos and time-varying Dark Energy through Cosmic Time
We study the correlations between parameters characterizing neutrino physics
and the evolution of dark energy. Using a fluid approach, we show that
time-varying dark energy models exhibit degeneracies with the cosmic neutrino
background over extended periods of the cosmic history, leading to a degraded
estimation of the total mass and number of species of neutrinos. We investigate
how to break degeneracies and combine multiple probes across cosmic time to
anchor the behaviour of the two components. We use Planck CMB data and BAO
measurements from the BOSS, SDSS and 6dF surveys to present current limits on
the model parameters, and then forecast the future reach from the CMB Stage-4
and DESI experiments. We show that a multi-probe analysis of current data
provides only marginal improvement on the determination of the individual
parameters and no reduction of the correlations. Future observations will
better distinguish the neutrino mass and preserve the current sensitivity to
the number of species even in case of a time-varying dark energy component.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, minor updates to match the version accepted by
Phys. Rev.
Field-theory results for three-dimensional transitions with complex symmetries
We discuss several examples of three-dimensional critical phenomena that can
be described by Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson theories. We present an
overview of field-theoretical results obtained from the analysis of high-order
perturbative series in the frameworks of the and of the
fixed-dimension d=3 expansions. In particular, we discuss the stability of the
O(N)-symmetric fixed point in a generic N-component theory, the critical
behaviors of randomly dilute Ising-like systems and frustrated spin systems
with noncollinear order, the multicritical behavior arising from the
competition of two distinct types of ordering with symmetry O() and
O() respectively.Comment: 9 pages, Talk at the Conference TH2002, Paris, July 200
Spinal cord gray matter segmentation using deep dilated convolutions
Gray matter (GM) tissue changes have been associated with a wide range of
neurological disorders and was also recently found relevant as a biomarker for
disability in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The ability to automatically
segment the GM is, therefore, an important task for modern studies of the
spinal cord. In this work, we devise a modern, simple and end-to-end fully
automated human spinal cord gray matter segmentation method using Deep
Learning, that works both on in vivo and ex vivo MRI acquisitions. We evaluate
our method against six independently developed methods on a GM segmentation
challenge and report state-of-the-art results in 8 out of 10 different
evaluation metrics as well as major network parameter reduction when compared
to the traditional medical imaging architectures such as U-Nets.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Corrections to scaling in entanglement entropy from boundary perturbations
We investigate the corrections to scaling of the Renyi entropies of a region
of size l at the end of a semi-infinite one-dimensional system described by a
conformal field theory when the corrections come from irrelevant boundary
operators. The corrections from irrelevant bulk operators with scaling
dimension x have been studied by Cardy and Calabrese (2010), and they found not
only the expected corrections of the form l^(4-2x) but also unusual corrections
that could not have been anticipated by finite-size scaling arguments alone.
However, for the case of perturbations from irrelevant boundary operators we
find that the only corrections that can occur to leading order are of the form
l^(2-2x_b) for boundary operators with scaling dimension x_b < 3/2, and l^(-1)
when x_b > 3/2. When x_b=3/2 they are of the form l^(-1)log(l). A marginally
irrelevant boundary perturbation will give leading corrections going as
log(l)^(-3). No unusual corrections occur when perturbing with a boundary
operator.Comment: 8 pages. Minor improvements and updated references. Published versio
Geometrical optics analysis of the short-time stability properties of the Einstein evolution equations
Many alternative formulations of Einstein's evolution have lately been
examined, in an effort to discover one which yields slow growth of
constraint-violating errors. In this paper, rather than directly search for
well-behaved formulations, we instead develop analytic tools to discover which
formulations are particularly ill-behaved. Specifically, we examine the growth
of approximate (geometric-optics) solutions, studied only in the future domain
of dependence of the initial data slice (e.g. we study transients). By
evaluating the amplification of transients a given formulation will produce, we
may therefore eliminate from consideration the most pathological formulations
(e.g. those with numerically-unacceptable amplification). This technique has
the potential to provide surprisingly tight constraints on the set of
formulations one can safely apply. To illustrate the application of these
techniques to practical examples, we apply our technique to the 2-parameter
family of evolution equations proposed by Kidder, Scheel, and Teukolsky,
focusing in particular on flat space (in Rindler coordinates) and Schwarzchild
(in Painleve-Gullstrand coordinates).Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Entanglement entropy of two disjoint intervals in conformal field theory
We study the entanglement of two disjoint intervals in the conformal field
theory of the Luttinger liquid (free compactified boson). Tr\rho_A^n for any
integer n is calculated as the four-point function of a particular type of
twist fields and the final result is expressed in a compact form in terms of
the Riemann-Siegel theta functions. In the decompactification limit we provide
the analytic continuation valid for all model parameters and from this we
extract the entanglement entropy. These predictions are checked against
existing numerical data.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figures. V2: Results for small x behavior added, typos
corrected and refs adde
Quantum Quench from a Thermal Initial State
We consider a quantum quench in a system of free bosons, starting from a
thermal initial state. As in the case where the system is initially in the
ground state, any finite subsystem eventually reaches a stationary thermal
state with a momentum-dependent effective temperature. We find that this can,
in some cases, even be lower than the initial temperature. We also study
lattice effects and discuss more general types of quenches.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; short published version, added references, minor
change
The role of initial conditions in the ageing of the long-range spherical model
The kinetics of the long-range spherical model evolving from various initial
states is studied. In particular, the large-time auto-correlation and -response
functions are obtained, for classes of long-range correlated initial states,
and for magnetized initial states. The ageing exponents can depend on certain
qualitative features of initial states. We explicitly find the conditions for
the system to cross over from ageing classes that depend on initial conditions
to those that do not.Comment: 15 pages; corrected some typo
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