Classification of "large" black holes into seven families
Dafa Li, Maggie Cheng, Xiongrong Li, Shuwang Li

TL;DR
This paper classifies large black holes into seven families using a black-hole--qubit correspondence, revealing that their classification depends on charge ratios and linking black hole entropy to quantum entanglement measures.
Contribution
It derives a local unitary classification of three-qubit entanglement and applies it to categorize large black holes, simplifying the classification process and clarifying the physical connection.
Findings
Black holes with 4 charges are LU equivalent if only charge signs differ.
Classification depends on charge ratios, not signs, simplifying categorization.
Identified black holes with maximal von Neumann entanglement entropy.
Abstract
The black-hole--qubit correspondence has been proven to be ``useful for obtaining additional insight into one of the string black hole theory and quantum information theory by exploiting approaches of the other"[Phys. Rev. D 82, 026003 (2010)]. Though different classes of stringy black holes can be related to the well-known stochastic local operations and classical communication (SLOCC) entanglement classes of pure states, the string theory requires a more detailed classification than the SLOCC classification of three qubits. In this paper, we derive the entanglement family of three qubits under local unitary operations (LU), and use the black-hole--qubit correspondence to classify \textquotedblleft large\textquotedblright\ black holes into seven inequivalent families. In particular, we show that two black holes with 4 non-vanishing charges (, , , and ) are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Computability, Logic, AI Algorithms
