71 research outputs found
The Schwarzschild-Black String AdS Soliton: Instability and Holographic Heat Transport
We present a calculation of two-point correlation functions of the
stress-energy tensor in the strongly-coupled, confining gauge theory which is
holographically dual to the AdS soliton geometry. The fact that the AdS soliton
smoothly caps off at a certain point along the holographic direction, ensures
that these correlators are dominated by quasinormal mode contributions and thus
show an exponential decay in position space. In order to study such a field
theory on a curved spacetime, we foliate the six-dimensional AdS soliton with a
Schwarzschild black hole. Via gauge/gravity duality, this new geometry
describes a confining field theory with supersymmetry breaking boundary
conditions on a non-dynamical Schwarzschild black hole background. We also
calculate stress-energy correlators for this setting, thus demonstrating
exponentially damped heat transport. This analysis is valid in the confined
phase. We model a deconfinement transition by explicitly demonstrating a
classical instability of Gregory-Laflamme-type of this bulk spacetime.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
Fine-Grained Chaos in Gravity
Quantum chaos can be characterized by an exponential growth of the thermal
out-of-time-order four-point function up to a scrambling time .
We discuss generalizations of this statement for certain higher-point
correlation functions. For concreteness, we study the Schwarzian theory of a
one-dimensional time reparametrization mode, which describes gravity
and the low-energy dynamics of the SYK model. We identify a particular set of
-point functions, characterized as being both "maximally braided" and
"k-OTO", which exhibit exponential growth until progressively longer timescales
. We suggest an interpretation as
scrambling of increasingly fine-grained measures of quantum information, which
correspondingly take progressively longer time to reach their thermal values.Comment: 8 pages; v2: minor clarifications, typos, added ref
Effective Field Theory for Chaotic CFTs
We derive an effective field theory for general chaotic two-dimensional
conformal field theories with a large central charge. The theory is a specific
and calculable instance of a more general framework recently proposed in [1].
We discuss the gauge symmetries of the model and how they relate to the
Lyapunov behaviour of certain correlators. We calculate the out-of-time-ordered
correlators diagnosing quantum chaos, as well as certain more fine-grained
higher-point generalizations, using our Lorentzian effective field theory. We
comment on potential future applications of the effective theory to real-time
thermal physics and conformal field theory.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figures; v2: minor improvements, added paragraph on
higher spin exchanges; v3: minor improvements, added reference, published
versio
Schwinger-Keldysh formalism II: Thermal equivariant cohomology
Causally ordered correlation functions of local operators in near-thermal
quantum systems computed using the Schwinger-Keldysh formalism obey a set of
Ward identities. These can be understood rather simply as the consequence of a
topological (BRST) algebra, called the universal Schwinger-Keldysh
superalgebra, as explained in our companion paper arXiv:1610.01940. In the
present paper we provide a mathematical discussion of this topological algebra.
In particular, we argue that the structures can be understood in the language
of extended equivariant cohomology. To keep the discussion self-contained, we
provide a basic review of the algebraic construction of equivariant cohomology
and explain how it can be understood in familiar terms as a superspace gauge
algebra. We demonstrate how the Schwinger-Keldysh construction can be
succinctly encoded in terms a thermal equivariant cohomology algebra which
naturally acts on the operator (super)-algebra of the quantum system. The main
rationale behind this exploration is to extract symmetry statements which are
robust under renormalization group flow and can hence be used to understand
low-energy effective field theory of near-thermal physics. To illustrate the
general principles, we focus on Langevin dynamics of a Brownian particle,
rephrasing some known results in terms of thermal equivariant cohomology. As
described elsewhere, the general framework enables construction of effective
actions for dissipative hydrodynamics and could potentially illumine our
understanding of black holes.Comment: 72 pages; v2: fixed typos. v3: minor clarifications and improvements
to non-equilbirum work relations discussion. v4: typos fixed. published
versio
The eightfold way to dissipation
We provide a complete characterization of hydrodynamic transport consistent
with the second law of thermodynamics at arbitrary orders in the gradient
expansion. A key ingredient in facilitating this analysis is the notion of
adiabatic hydrodynamics, which enables isolation of the genuinely dissipative
parts of transport. We demonstrate that most transport is adiabatic.
Furthermore, of the dissipative part, only terms at the leading order in
gradient expansion are constrained to be sign-definite by the second law (as
has been derived before).Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. v2: minor clarifications. v3: minor changes. title
in published version differ
The quantum -spin glass model: A user manual for holographers
We study a large- bosonic quantum mechanical sigma-model with a spherical
target space subject to disordered interactions, more colloquially known as the
-spin spherical model. Replica symmetry is broken at low temperatures and
for sufficiently weak quantum fluctuations, which drives the system into a spin
glass phase. The first half of this paper is dedicated to a discussion of this
model's thermodynamics, with particular emphasis on the marginally stable spin
glass. This phase exhibits an emergent conformal symmetry in the strong
coupling regime, which dictates its thermodynamic properties. It is associated
with an extensive number of nearby states in the free energy landscape. We
discuss in detail an elegant approximate solution to the spin glass equations,
which interpolates between the conformal regime and an ultraviolet-complete
short distance solution. In the second half of this paper we explore the
real-time dynamics of the model and uncover quantum chaos as measured by
out-of-time-order four-point functions, both numerically and analytically. We
find exponential Lyapunov growth, which intricately depends on the model's
couplings and becomes strongest in the quantum critical regime. We emphasize
that the spin glass phase also exhibits quantum chaos, albeit with
parametrically smaller Lyapunov exponent than in the replica symmetric phase.
An analytical calculation in the marginal spin glass phase suggests that this
Lyapunov exponent vanishes in a particular infinite coupling limit. We comment
on the potential meaning of these observations from the perspective of
holography.Comment: 66 (+39) pages, 19 (+2) figures; v2: added references and minor
comments (published version
Collisions of localized shocks and quantum circuits
We study collisions between localized shockwaves inside a black hole
interior. We give a holographic boundary description of this process in terms
of the overlap of two growing perturbations in a shared quantum circuit. The
perturbations grow both exponentially as well as ballistically. Due to a
competition between different physical effects, the circuit analysis shows
dependence on the transverse locations and exhibits four regimes of
qualitatively different behaviors. On the gravity side we study properties of
the post-collision geometry, using exact calculations in simple setups and
estimations in more general circumstances. We show that the circuit analysis
offers intuitive and surprisingly accurate predictions about gravity
computations involving non-linear features of general relativity.Comment: v1: 26+11 pages, 17 figures; v2: published version in JHE
Operator growth and black hole formation
When two particles collide in an asymptotically AdS spacetime with high
enough energy and small enough impact parameter, they can form a black hole.
Motivated by dual quantum circuit considerations, we propose a threshold
condition for black hole formation. Intuitively the condition can be understood
as the onset of overlap of the butterfly cones describing the ballistic spread
of the effect of the perturbations on the boundary systems. We verify the
correctness of the condition in three bulk dimensions. We describe a six-point
correlation function that can diagnose this condition and compute it in
two-dimensional CFTs using eikonal resummation.Comment: 20+9 pages, 10 figures. v2: discussions added in sections 5 and
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