Sewing spacetime with Lorentzian threads: complexity and the emergence of time in quantum gravity
Juan F. Pedraza, Andrea Russo, Andrew Svesko, Zachary Weller-Davies

TL;DR
This paper introduces Lorentzian flows, called 'threads', as a new geometric tool to understand holographic complexity and the emergence of time in quantum gravity, linking tensor networks, Einstein's equations, and spacetime structure.
Contribution
It develops a Lorentzian flow framework for holographic complexity, providing explicit geometric realizations, a refined complexity measure, and a connection to Einstein's equations and emergent time.
Findings
Lorentzian flows obey nesting properties and bound complexity rates.
Complexity relates to the minimum number of 'gatelines' in tensor networks.
Bulk Einstein's equations are equivalent to the holographic first law of complexity.
Abstract
Holographic entanglement entropy was recently recast in terms of Riemannian flows or 'bit threads'. We consider the Lorentzian analog to reformulate the 'complexity=volume' conjecture using Lorentzian flows -- timelike vector fields whose minimum flux through a boundary subregion is equal to the volume of the homologous maximal bulk Cauchy slice. By the nesting of Lorentzian flows, holographic complexity is shown to obey a number of properties. Particularly, the rate of complexity is bounded below by conditional complexity, describing a multi-step optimization with intermediate and final target states. We provide multiple explicit geometric realizations of Lorentzian flows in AdS backgrounds, including their time-dependence and behavior near the singularity in a black hole interior. Conceptually, discretized flows are interpreted as Lorentzian threads or 'gatelines'. Upon selecting a…
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