Quantum matter is weakly entangled at low energies
Samuel J. Garratt, Dmitry A. Abanin

TL;DR
This paper establishes upper bounds on entanglement entropies in many-body quantum states based on thermodynamic properties, revealing that low-energy states are weakly entangled and obey area laws under broad conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a method to bound entanglement entropy using thermodynamic data, applicable to a wide range of quantum systems regardless of spectral gap.
Findings
Upper bounds relate entanglement entropy to thermal entropy of fictitious systems.
Ground-state entanglement obeys an area law when subsystem thermal entropy scales with surface area.
Bounds are shown to be optimal in various physical models.
Abstract
We construct upper bounds on entanglement entropies of many-body quantum states that have fixed energy expectation values with respect to geometrically local Hamiltonians. Our focus is on entanglement entropies of subsystems that make up approximately half of the full system. The upper bound on the von Neumann entanglement entropy is half the sum of the thermal entropies of two fictitious systems at the same temperature as one another, with an additional area-law contribution in some systems. The effective temperature is chosen such that the sum of the thermal energies of the two fictitious systems matches the constraint on the energy of the state in the original problem; at subextensive energies, this temperature decreases with increasing system size. Our upper bounds on R\'{e}nyi entanglement entropies take an analogous form. As a first application we show that ground-state Schmidt…
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