AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the complexity of Gaussian states in continuous many-body quantum systems, focusing on elements like free quantum field theories and their approximations.
  • The researchers introduce a method for measuring state complexity using the Fubini-Study metric, which accounts for the application of various gates during state transformation based on a state-dependent metric.
  • Interestingly, despite exploring quantum field theories not related to Einstein gravity, the findings reveal notable parallels with existing holographic complexity theories, particularly in how the complexity minimizes within certain mathematical structures.

Article Abstract

We investigate notions of complexity of states in continuous many-body quantum systems. We focus on Gaussian states which include ground states of free quantum field theories and their approximations encountered in the context of the continuous version of the multiscale entanglement renormalization ansatz. Our proposal for quantifying state complexity is based on the Fubini-Study metric. It leads to counting the number of applications of each gate (infinitesimal generator) in the transformation, subject to a state-dependent metric. We minimize the defined complexity with respect to momentum-preserving quadratic generators which form su(1,1) algebras. On the manifold of Gaussian states generated by these operations, the Fubini-Study metric factorizes into hyperbolic planes with minimal complexity circuits reducing to known geodesics. Despite working with quantum field theories far outside the regime where Einstein gravity duals exist, we find striking similarities between our results and those of holographic complexity proposals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.121602DOI Listing

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