Mixed-state quantum anomaly and multipartite entanglement
Leonardo A. Lessa, Meng Cheng, Chong Wang

TL;DR
This paper uncovers a fundamental link between mixed-state entanglement and 't Hooft anomalies, showing that symmetric mixed states in anomalous systems exhibit long-range multipartite entanglement and cannot be generated from simpler states.
Contribution
It establishes a novel connection between quantum anomalies and multipartite entanglement in mixed states, providing proofs in low dimensions and implications for long-range quantum correlations.
Findings
Strong symmetry implies (d+2)-nonseparability of mixed states.
States with anomaly cannot be created from (d+2)-separable states via finite-depth channels.
Mixed anomaly constrains long-range correlations and properties like invertibility and Markovianity.
Abstract
Quantum entanglement measures of many-body states have been increasingly useful to characterize phases of matter. Here we explore a surprising connection between mixed state entanglement and 't Hooft anomaly. More specifically, we consider lattice systems in space dimensions with anomalous symmetry where the anomaly is characterized by an invariant in the group cohomology . We show that any mixed state that is strongly symmetric under , in the sense that , is necessarily -nonseparable, i.e. is not the mixture of tensor products of states in the Hilbert space. Furthermore, such states cannot be prepared from any -separable states using finite-depth local quantum channels, so the nonseparability is long-ranged in nature. We provide proof of these results in , and plausibility arguments in . The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
