Area laws for the entanglement entropy - a review
J. Eisert, M. Cramer, M.B. Plenio

TL;DR
This review discusses the concept of area laws for entanglement entropy in quantum many-body systems, highlighting their theoretical foundations, implications for simulation, and relevance across physics fields.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of rigorous results, differences between models, and the connection between entanglement and efficient simulation techniques.
Findings
Area laws often limit entanglement entropy growth to boundary area.
Differences between bosonic and fermionic models are clarified.
Area laws have significant implications for numerical simulation methods.
Abstract
Physical interactions in quantum many-body systems are typically local: Individual constituents interact mainly with their few nearest neighbors. This locality of interactions is inherited by a decay of correlation functions, but also reflected by scaling laws of a quite profound quantity: The entanglement entropy of ground states. This entropy of the reduced state of a subregion often merely grows like the boundary area of the subregion, and not like its volume, in sharp contrast with an expected extensive behavior. Such "area laws" for the entanglement entropy and related quantities have received considerable attention in recent years. They emerge in several seemingly unrelated fields, in the context of black hole physics, quantum information science, and quantum many-body physics where they have important implications on the numerical simulation of lattice models. In this Colloquium…
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