Topological squashed entanglement: nonlocal order parameter for one-dimensional topological superconductors
Alfonso Maiellaro, Antonio Marino, Fabrizio Illuminati

TL;DR
This paper introduces topological squashed entanglement as a nonlocal order parameter for one-dimensional topological superconductors, demonstrating its quantization, stability, and ability to distinguish different topological phases.
Contribution
It proposes a novel entanglement-based order parameter, the edge squashed entanglement, that effectively characterizes topological phases and remains robust under various perturbations.
Findings
Edge squashed entanglement is quantized in the topological phase.
It detects topological phase transitions through correct scaling behavior.
It distinguishes multiple topological phases and counts Majorana modes.
Abstract
Identifying entanglement-based order parameters characterizing topological systems, in particular topological superconductors and topological insulators, has remained a major challenge for the physics of quantum matter in the last two decades. Here we show that the end-to-end, long-distance, bipartite squashed entanglement between the edges of a many-body system, defined in terms of the edge-to-edge quantum conditional mutual information, is the natural nonlocal order parameter for topological superconductors in one dimension as well as in quasi one-dimensional geometries. For the Kitaev chain in the entire topological phase, the edge squashed entanglement is quantized to log(2)/2, half the maximal Bell-state entanglement, and vanishes in the trivial phase. Such topological squashed entanglement exhibits the correct scaling at the quantum phase transition, is stable in the presence of…
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.
