Entanglement and Excitations in Gauge/Gravity Duality
Ronnie Rodgers

TL;DR
This thesis explores entanglement entropy, collective excitations, and defect contributions in holographic models of strongly coupled quantum field theories, revealing insights into degrees of freedom, emergent symmetries, and quantum gravity aspects.
Contribution
It provides new insights into entanglement entropy behavior, collective excitation spectra, and defect contributions in holographic duals, highlighting conditions for degrees of freedom and symmetry emergence.
Findings
Surface area term in entanglement entropy can increase with deformations.
Holographic zero sound exhibits Fermi-liquid-like temperature dependence.
Defect contributions to Weyl anomaly decrease along RG flows.
Abstract
In this thesis, we study a variety of phenomena in strongly coupled quantum field theories by performing calculations in their gravitational duals. We compute entanglement entropy in a variety of holographic systems, paying particular attention to its long-distance behaviour, characterised by a term proportional to surface area. This term is known to decrease along Lorentz-invariant renormalisation group flows, suggesting that it may count massless degrees of freedom. We find that more general deformations may increase this area term, possibly indicating an enhanced number of long-distance degrees of freedom. We observe a correlation between this enhancement and the emergence of new scaling symmetry at long distances. Next, we study the spectrum of collective excitations in a holographic model of a non-Fermi liquid. At high temperatures, the spectrum of collective excitations includes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
