2,813 research outputs found
Entanglement entropy in one-dimensional disordered interacting system: The role of localization
The properties of the entanglement entropy (EE) in one-dimensional disordered
interacting systems are studied. Anderson localization leaves a clear signature
on the average EE, as it saturates on length scale exceeding the localization
length. This is verified by numerically calculating the EE for an ensemble of
disordered realizations using density matrix renormalization group (DMRG). A
heuristic expression describing the dependence of the EE on the localization
length, which takes into account finite size effects, is proposed. This is used
to extract the localization length as function of the interaction strength. The
localization length dependence on the interaction fits nicely with the
expectations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Entanglement Entropy in the Two-Dimensional Random Transverse Field Ising Model
The scaling behavior of the entanglement entropy in the two-dimensional
random transverse field Ising model is studied numerically through the strong
disordered renormalization group method. We find that the leading term of the
entanglement entropy always scales linearly with the block size. However,
besides this \emph{area law} contribution, we find a subleading logarithmic
correction at the quantum critical point. This correction is discussed from the
point of view of an underlying percolation transition, both at finite and at
zero temperature.Comment: 4.3 pages, 4 figure
Violation of area-law scaling for the entanglement entropy in spin 1/2 chains
Entanglement entropy obeys area law scaling for typical physical quantum
systems. This may naively be argued to follow from locality of interactions. We
show that this is not the case by constructing an explicit simple spin chain
Hamiltonian with nearest neighbor interactions that presents an entanglement
volume scaling law. This non-translational model is contrived to have couplings
that force the accumulation of singlet bonds across the half chain. Our result
is complementary to the known relation between non-translational invariant,
nearest neighbor interacting Hamiltonians and QMA complete problems.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Area law and vacuum reordering in harmonic networks
We review a number of ideas related to area law scaling of the geometric
entropy from the point of view of condensed matter, quantum field theory and
quantum information. An explicit computation in arbitrary dimensions of the
geometric entropy of the ground state of a discretized scalar free field theory
shows the expected area law result. In this case, area law scaling is a
manifestation of a deeper reordering of the vacuum produced by majorization
relations. Furthermore, the explicit control on all the eigenvalues of the
reduced density matrix allows for a verification of entropy loss along the
renormalization group trajectory driven by the mass term. A further result of
our computation shows that single-copy entanglement also obeys area law
scaling, majorization relations and decreases along renormalization group
flows.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; typos correcte
Equivalence of critical scaling laws for many-body entanglement in the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model
We establish a relation between several entanglement properties in the
Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model, which is a system of mutually interacting spins
embedded in a magnetic field. We provide analytical proofs that the single-copy
entanglement and the global geometric entanglement of the ground state close to
and at criticality behave as the entanglement entropy. These results are in
deep contrast to what is found in one- dimensional spin systems where these
three entanglement measures behave differently.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, published versio
Molecular evolution of aphids and their primary ( Buchnera sp.) and secondary endosymbionts: implications for the role of symbiosis in insect evolution.
Aphids maintain an obligate, endosymbiotic association with Buchnera sp., a bacterium closely related to Escherichia coli. Bacteria are housed in specialized cells of organ-like structures called bacteriomes in the hemocoel of the aphid and are maternally transmitted. Phylogenetic studies have shown that the association had a single origin, dated about 200-250 million years ago, and that host and endosymbiont lineages have evolved in parallel since then. However, the pattern of deepest branching within the aphid family remains unsolved, which thereby hampers tin appraisal of, for example, the role played by horizontal gene transfer in the early evolution of Buchnera. The main role of Buchnera in this association is the biosynthesis and provisioning of essential amino acids to its aphid host. Physiological and metabolic studies have recently substantiated such nutritional role. In addition, genetic studies of Buchnera from several aphids have shown additional modifications, such as strong genome reduction, high A+T content compared to free-living bacteria, differential evolutionary rates, a relative increase in the number of non-synonymous substitutions, and gene amplification mediated by plasmids. Symbiosis is an active process in insect evolution cis revealed by the intermediate values of the previous characteristics showed by secondary symbionts compared to free-living bacteria and Buchnera
The Effect of Fertiliser Treatment on the Development of Rangelands in Argentina
In Argentina grazing of rangelands may result in a decrease in winter gramineous species with an increase in summer weeds such as Cynodon dactylon. Lolium multiflorum is an important forage resource for grazing in the autumn, winter and spring. A delay in its emergence may occur because of summer weeds, which reduces the germination rate. The proportion of the seed bank as ryegrass allows the recovery of natural grassland and facilitates an increase in the productivity of livestock. The objective of this study was the evaluation of the impact of application of fertiliser in the short term on the relationship with botanical composition at different herbage availabilities
Multi-party entanglement in graph states
Graph states are multi-particle entangled states that correspond to
mathematical graphs, where the vertices of the graph take the role of quantum
spin systems and edges represent Ising interactions. They are many-body spin
states of distributed quantum systems that play a significant role in quantum
error correction, multi-party quantum communication, and quantum computation
within the framework of the one-way quantum computer. We characterize and
quantify the genuine multi-particle entanglement of such graph states in terms
of the Schmidt measure, to which we provide upper and lower bounds in graph
theoretical terms. Several examples and classes of graphs will be discussed,
where these bounds coincide. These examples include trees, cluster states of
different dimension, graphs that occur in quantum error correction, such as the
concatenated [7,1,3]-CSS code, and a graph associated with the quantum Fourier
transform in the one-way computer. We also present general transformation rules
for graphs when local Pauli measurements are applied, and give criteria for the
equivalence of two graphs up to local unitary transformations, employing the
stabilizer formalism. For graphs of up to seven vertices we provide complete
characterization modulo local unitary transformations and graph isomorphies.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables, typos corrected (e.g. in measurement
rules), references added/update
Genuine Multipartite Entanglement in Quantum Phase Transitions
We demonstrate that the Global Entanglement (GE) measure defined by Meyer and
Wallach, J. Math. Phys. 43, 4273 (2002), is maximal at the critical point for
the Ising chain in a transverse magnetic field. Our analysis is based on the
equivalence of GE to the averaged linear entropy, allowing the understanding of
multipartite entanglement (ME) features through a generalization of GE for
bipartite blocks of qubits. Moreover, in contrast to GE, the proposed ME
measure can distinguish three paradigmatic entangled states: ,
, and . As such the generalized measure can detect
genuine ME and is maximal at the critical point.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Replaced with final published versio
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