Spacetime from Unentanglement
Yasunori Nomura, Pratik Rath, Nico Salzetta

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relationship between entanglement levels and the emergence of spacetime in holographic theories, demonstrating that maximal entanglement prevents spacetime reconstruction, emphasizing the importance of intermediate entanglement.
Contribution
It proves that maximally entangled states cannot reconstruct spacetime, clarifies the role of intermediate entanglement, and explores implications for holographic dualities in cosmological models.
Findings
Maximally entangled states lack reconstructable spacetime.
Intermediate entanglement is essential for spacetime emergence.
The paper establishes a theorem linking entanglement level to spacetime reconstructability.
Abstract
The past decade has seen a tremendous effort toward unraveling the relationship between entanglement and emergent spacetime. These investigations have revealed that entanglement between holographic degrees of freedom is crucial for the existence of bulk spacetime. We examine this connection from the other end of the entanglement spectrum and clarify the assertion that maximally entangled states have no reconstructable spacetime. To do so, we first define the conditions for bulk reconstructability. Under these terms, we scrutinize two cases of maximally entangled holographic states. One is the familiar example of AdS black holes; these are dual to thermal states of the boundary CFT. Sending the temperature to the cutoff scale makes the state maximally entangled and the respective black hole consumes the spacetime. We then examine the de Sitter limit of FRW spacetimes. This limit is…
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