Entanglement distance between quantum states and its implications for density-matrix-renormalization-group study of degenerate ground-states
Mohammad-Sadegh Vaezi, and Abolhassan Vaezi

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of entanglement distance between quantum states, analyzing its dependence on energy and subsystem size in various systems, and explores its implications for DMRG studies of degenerate ground states.
Contribution
It defines and characterizes entanglement distance in gapless and gapped systems, linking it to conformal field theory and topological states, with implications for quantum simulation and DMRG algorithms.
Findings
Entanglement distance follows power law dependence with specific exponents in gapless systems.
Degenerate ground states related by nonlocal operators exhibit maximum entanglement distance.
Different types of degeneracies show distinct entanglement distance behaviors, affecting quantum simulation complexity.
Abstract
We study the concept of entanglement distance between two quantum states which quantifies the amount of information shared between their reduced density matrices (RDMs). Using analytical arguments combined with density-matrix-renormalization-group (DMRG) and exact diagonalization (ED) calculations, we show that for gapless systems the entanglement distance has power law dependence on the energy separation and subsystem size with and exponents, respectively. Using conformal field theory (CFT) we find and for Abelian theories with such as free fermions. For non-Abelian CFTs , and is twice the conformal dimension of the thermal primary fields. For instance for parafermion CFT and . For gapped 1+1D fermion systems, we show that the entanglement…
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