Format results
-
-
Asymptotic structure and the characterisation of gravitational
Jose Senovilla University of the Basque Country
-
Cauchy Characteristic Matching
Sizheng Ma Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
Title: Braid group, Askey-Wilson algebra and centralizers of U_q(sl_2)
Meri Zaimi Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
-
Dissipative State Preparation and the Dissipative Quantum Eigensolver
Toby Cubitt University College London
-
Petz map recovery in quantum many-body systems
Yijian Zou Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
Single-copy activation of Bell nonlocality and entanglement certification via broadcasting of quantum states
Emanuel-Cristian Boghiu Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO)
-
Asymptotic structure and the characterisation of gravitational radiation at infinity
Jose Senovilla University of the Basque Country
-
-
Quantum influences and event relativity
Nicholas Ormrod Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
-
-
Examining challenges to LCDM model near and far: from nearby dwarf galaxies to UV bright galaxies at z>5
Andrey Kravtsov University of Chicago
I will present a galaxy formation model within the Lambda Cold Dark Matter (LCDM) framework that is calibrated on the results of galaxy formation simulations and some of the empirical properties of nearby dwarf galaxies. I will then use the model to interpret a number of ostensible challenges to the LCDM framework, such as the "too-big-too-fail problem", "central density problem" and the "planes of satellites" problem and will argue that none of these pose a serious challenge to LCDM, as the corresponding observations can be largely understood within the current galaxy formation modeling. I will also show that the same galaxy formation model can explain the abundance of UV-bright galaxies at z>5 measured by the Hubble Space Telescope and James Webb Space Telescope recently, if the expected increase of burstiness of star formation in galaxies towards early epochs is taken into account.
---
Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/91798519705?pwd=Nk9rM0tFSXcrWDhLdXFhVmJWbGgvUT09
-
Asymptotic structure and the characterisation of gravitational
Jose Senovilla University of the Basque Country
With the main purpose of identifying the existence of gravitational radiation at infinity (scri), a novel approach to the asymptotic structure of spacetime is presented, focusing mainly in cases with non-negative cosmological constant. The basic idea is to consider the strength of tidal forces experienced by scri. To that end I will introduce the asymptotic (radiant) super-momentum, a causal vector defined at scri with remarkable properties that, in particular, provides an innovative characterization of gravitational radiation valid for the general case with Λ ≥ 0 (and which has been proven to be equivalent when Λ = 0 to the standard one based on the News tensor). This analysis is also shown to be supported by the initial- (or final-) value Cauchy-type problem defined at scri. The implications are discussed in some detail. The geometric structure of scri, and of its cuts, is clarified. The question of whether or not a News tensor can be defined in the presence of a positive cosmological constant is addressed. Several definitions of asymptotic symmetries are presented. Conserved charges that may detect gravitational radiation are exhibited. Balance laws that might be useful as diagnostic tools to test the accuracy of model waveforms discussed. An interpretation of the Geroch `rho' tensor is found. The whole thing will be complemented with a series of illustrative examples based on exact solutions. In particular we will see that exact solutions with black holes will be radiative if, and only if, they are accelerated.
---
Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/96816406686?pwd=eGZINlo2R0d1YkZMRGhackRNMzBVUT09
-
Cauchy Characteristic Matching
Sizheng Ma Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
Two major approaches are used when numerically solving the Einstein field equations. The first one is to use spatial Cauchy slices and treat the system as a standard Cauchy initial value problem. Cauchy-characteristic evolution (CCE) serves as the second approach, which evolves spacetime based on null hypersurfaces. The Cauchy formulation is suitable for the strong field region but is computationally expensive to extend to the wave zone, whereas the Characteristic approach is fast in the wave zone but fails near the binary system where the null surfaces are ill-defined. By combining those two techniques — simulating the inner region with Cauchy evolution and the outer region with CCE, Cauchy-Characteristic matching (CCM) enables us to take advantage of both methods. In this talk, I present our recent implementation of CCM based on a numerical relativity code SpECTRE. I also discuss how CCM improves the accuracy of Cauchy boundary conditions — a benefit that allows us to evolve less of the wave zone in the Cauchy code without losing precision.
---
Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/98246275227?pwd=QWtmUDNkMlF6bXROLzBoYXVVTGpldz09
-
Title: Braid group, Askey-Wilson algebra and centralizers of U_q(sl_2)
Meri Zaimi Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
In this talk, I will consider the centralizer of the quantum group U_q(sl_2) in the tensor product of three identical spin representations. The case of spin 1/2 (fundamental representation) is understood within the framework of the Schur-Weyl duality for U_q(sl_N), and the centralizer is known to be isomorphic to a Temperley-Lieb algebra. The case of spin 1 has also been studied and corresponds to the Birman-Murakami-Wenzl algebra. For a general spin, I will explain how to describe explicitly the centralizer (by generators and relations) using a combination of the braid group algebra and the Askey-Wilson algebra, which has been introduced in the context of orthogonal polynomials.
---
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/98471794356?pwd=NjZFdjRFaDFON05HNkdTZS9hZTUvQT09
-
Commuting operations factorise
Renato Renner ETH Zurich
Tsirelson’s problem involves two agents, Alice and Bob, who apply measurements on the same quantum system, K. It asks whether commutation, i.e., independence of whether Alice or Bob measures first, is sufficient to conclude that Alice and Bob’s measurements can be factorised so that they act non-trivially only on distinct subsystems of K. In this talk, I will present a “fully quantum generalisation” of this problem, where Alice and Bob’s measurements are replaced by operations on K that may depend on additional quantum inputs and produce quantum outputs. As for Tsirelson’s original problem, it turns out that commutation indeed implies factorisation, provided that all relevant systems are finite-dimensional.
This is joint work with Ramona Wolf; preprint available at arXiv:2308.05792.---
Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/99031410183?pwd=MzVoQXpPSll6bFp1b1g3U2J4U21rZz09
-
Dissipative State Preparation and the Dissipative Quantum Eigensolver
Toby Cubitt University College London
Finding ground states of quantum many-body systems is one of the most important---and one of the most notoriously difficult---problems in physics, both in scientific research and in practical applications. Indeed, we know from a complexity-theoretic perspective that all methods (quantum or classical) must necessarily fail to find the ground state efficiently in general. The ground state energy problem is already NP-hard even for classical, frustration-free, local Hamiltonians with constant spectral gap. For general quantum Hamiltonians, the problem becomes QMA-hard.
Nonetheless, as ground state problems are of such importance, and classical algorithms are often successful despite the theoretical exponential worst-case complexity, a number of quantum algorithms for the ground state problem have been proposed and studied. From quantum phase estimation-based methods, to adiabatic state preparation, to dissipative state engineering, to the variation quantum eigensolver (VQE), to quantum/probabilistic imaginary-time evolution (QITE/PITE).
Dissipative state engineering was first introduced in 2009 by Verstraete, Cirac and Wolf and by Kraus et al. However, it only works for the restricted class of frustration-free Hamiltonians.
In this talk, I will show how to construct a dissipative state preparation dynamics that provably produces the correct ground state for arbitrary Hamiltonians, including frustrated ones. This leads to a new quantum algorithm for preparing ground states: the Dissipative Quantum Eigensolver (DQE). DQE has a number of interesting advantages over previous ground state preparation algorithms:
• The entire algorithm consists simply of iterating the same set of simple local measurements repeatedly.
• The expected overlap with the ground state increases monotonically with the length of time this process is allowed to run.
• It converges to the ground state subspace unconditionally, without any assumptions on or prior information about the Hamiltonian (such as spectral gap or ground state energy bound).
• The algorithm does not require any variational optimisation over parameters.
• It is often able to find the ground state in low circuit depth in practice.
• It has a simple implementation on certain types of quantum hardware, in particular photonic quantum computers.
• It is immune to errors in the initial state.
• It is inherently fault-resilient, without incurring any fault-tolerance overhead. I.e.\ not only is it resilient to errors on the quantum state, but also to faulty implementations of the algorithm itself; the overlap of the output with the ground state subspace degrades smoothly with the error rate, independent of the total run-time.
I give a mathematically rigorous analysis of the DQE algorithm and proofs of all the above properties, using non-commutative generalisations of methods from classical probability theory.---
Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/96022753460?pwd=SWlUVkVta1RyY3dsWUJWckRqOHdNdz09
-
Petz map recovery in quantum many-body systems
Yijian Zou Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
We study the Petz map, which is a universal recovery channel of a tripartite quantum state upon erasing one party, in quantum many-body systems. The fidelity of the recovered state with the original state quantifies how much information shared by the two parties is not mediated by one of the party, and has a universal lower bound in terms of the conditional mutual information (CMI). I will study this quantity in two different contexts. First, in a CFT ground state, we show that the fidelity is universal, which means it only depends on the central charge and the cross ratio. We compute this universal function numerically and show that it is consistently better than the naive CMI bound. Secondly, we show that for two broad classes of the states, the CMI lower bound is saturated. These include stabilizer states (in any dimensions) and the ground state of 2+1D topological order.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/92623435839?pwd=N1JIdkUwWHFkZGpqb1p1V3NKYy91QT09
-
Single-copy activation of Bell nonlocality and entanglement certification via broadcasting of quantum states
Emanuel-Cristian Boghiu Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO)
Activation of Bell nonlocality refers to the phenomenon where some entangled mixed states that admit a local hidden variable model in the standard Bell scenario nevertheless reveal their nonlocal nature in more exotic measurement scenarios. It has recently been shown that by broadcasting the subsystems of a bipartite quantum state, one can activate Bell nonlocality and significantly improve noise tolerance bounds for device-independent and semi-device-independent entanglement certification, with a single copy of the state and local measurements. In this talk I will review the state of the art on activation of nonlocality and existence of local hidden variable models, introduce the broadcasting technique and outline several interesting results and research directions.
---
Zoom link https://pitp.zoom.us/j/91214624839?pwd=dXNUOERLMldScjczemlaSUhFbFNWQT09
-
Asymptotic structure and the characterisation of gravitational radiation at infinity
Jose Senovilla University of the Basque Country
With the main purpose of identifying the existence of gravitational radiation at infinity (scri), a novel approach to the asymptotic structure of spacetime is presented, focusing mainly in cases with non-negative cosmological constant. The basic idea is to consider the strength of tidal forces experienced by scri. To that end I will introduce the asymptotic (radiant) super-momentum, a causal vector defined at scri with remarkable properties that, in particular, provides an innovative characterization of gravitational radiation valid for the general case with Λ ≥ 0 (and which has been proven to be equivalent when Λ = 0 to the standard one based on the News tensor). This analysis is also shown to be supported by the initial- (or final-) value Cauchy-type problem defined at scri. The implications are discussed in some detail. The geometric structure of scri, and of its cuts, is clarified. The question of whether or not a News tensor can be defined in the presence of a positive cosmological constant is addressed. Several definitions of asymptotic symmetries are presented. Conserved charges that may detect gravitational radiation are exhibited. Balance laws that might be useful as diagnostic tools to test the accuracy of model waveforms discussed. An interpretation of the Geroch `rho' tensor is found. The whole thing will be complemented with a series of illustrative examples based on exact solutions. In particular we will see that exact solutions with black holes will be radiative if, and only if, they are accelerated.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95879544523?pwd=MFl5UEtUZ0hUcU1hNk1SZ2R4MThxUT09
-
Gamma-ray bursts and their afterglows as multi-messenger counterparts
Hendrik van Eerten University of Bath
Merging neutron stars have long been speculated to produce Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs). While this has been the standard assumption for short GRBs for decades, this was only officially confirmed with the still relatively recent detection of gravitational wave counterpart GRB 170817A. In this presentation, I will discuss how we model short GRBs and their afterglows produced by the relativistic jets launched during the merger. A recent development of interest includes the apparent confirmation of some 'long' GRBs to also follow from mergers rather than collapsing massive stars, which has implication for the prospects of future multi-messenger detections. Joint modelling of GRB / afterglow data and GW signals makes it possible to further constrain the shared model parameters between the two, most notably the orientation of the system.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/95551884959?pwd=bUVGVzhXK3pLb3MxMGV4ejZzUmRYdz09
-
Quantum influences and event relativity
Nicholas Ormrod Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
A number of no-go theorems suggest that theories upholding both unitarity and relativity must deny that events are absolute. I'll show how quantum causal influences allow us to articulate an attractive conception of relational events. This will lead us towards a precise, observer-independent reformulation of quantum theory, in which relational events emerge from causation.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/98649944363?pwd=Y25NOUROelY2ZmFpVWhTZFErV2MwUT09
-
Gravity under Scrutiny on Cosmic Scales
Agnès Ferté Stanford University
While General Relativity has withstood tests on solar system scales, progress in observational cosmology now enables tests on the largest scales. I will present results from our tests of gravity using Dark Energy Survey Year 3 weak lensing and clustering data in addition to a variety of complementary data. One outcome of this analysis was the necessity to further explore lensing consistency so I will present preliminary results of such tests using the latest Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) lensing data. These analyses are setting the scene for future tests of fundamental physics with CMB and galaxy surveys: I will show expected results and challenges from the Rubin Observatory. I will finally argue for the use of machine learning for theory exploration, to better organize our efforts within the future experimental landscape. As PI is a leading center in outreach, I will end my talk by sharing my experience with science content creation on various social media platforms.
Zoom link: https://pitp.zoom.us/j/96929387143?pwd=WW1CZElpMkN2U1RQUjB3VERxRVQ5dz09