Aspects of Entanglement Entropy in Algebraic Quantum Field Theory
Diego Pontello

TL;DR
This thesis explores the algebraic structure of entanglement in quantum field theories, providing rigorous calculations of entanglement measures, revealing non-local features, and introducing new quantum information quantities related to symmetries.
Contribution
It offers the first rigorous computations of entanglement measures and modular Hamiltonians in algebraic QFT, and introduces an entropic order parameter and certainty relation linked to superselection sectors.
Findings
Exact solutions for entanglement measures and modular Hamiltonians.
Identification of an entropic order parameter for symmetry groups.
Introduction of the entropic certainty relation connected to subfactor theory.
Abstract
In this thesis, we study aspects of entanglement theory of quantum field theories from an algebraic point of view. The main motivation is to gain insights about the general structure of the entanglement in QFT, towards a definition of an entropic version of QFT. In the opposite direction, we are also interested in exploring any consequence of the entanglement in algebraic QFT. This may help us to reveal unknown features of QFT, with the final aim of finding a dynamical principle which allows us to construct non-trivial and rigorous models of QFT. The algebraic approach is the natural framework to define and study entanglement in QFT, and hence, to pose the above inquiries. After a self-contained review of algebraic QFT and quantum information theory in operator algebras, we focus on our results. We compute, in a mathematically rigorous way, exact solutions of entanglement measures and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
