Clustering of conditional mutual information and quantum Markov structure at arbitrary temperatures
Tomotaka Kuwahara

TL;DR
This paper proves that conditional mutual information in quantum systems decays exponentially with distance, even at low temperatures where topological order exists, revealing limitations on long-range tripartite entanglement.
Contribution
It establishes a clustering theorem for CMI at arbitrary temperatures and introduces a formalism for analyzing the locality of effective Hamiltonians in quantum systems.
Findings
CMI decays exponentially with distance
Correlation length increases polynomially with inverse temperature
Long-range tripartite entanglement is suppressed at low temperatures
Abstract
Recent investigations have unveiled exotic quantum phases that elude characterization by simple bipartite correlation functions. In these phases, long-range entanglement arising from tripartite correlations plays a central role. Consequently, the study of multipartite correlations has become a focal point in modern physics. In these, Conditional Mutual Information (CMI) is one of the most well-established information-theoretic measures, adept at encapsulating the essence of various exotic phases, including topologically ordered ones. Within the realm of quantum many-body physics, it has been a long-sought goal to establish a quantum analog to the Hammersley--Clifford theorem that bridges the two concepts of the Gibbs state and the Markov network. This theorem posits that the correlation length of CMI remains short-range across all thermal equilibrium quantum phases. In this work, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Neural Networks and Applications
