Non-local magic, classical hardness, and gravitational back-reaction

POSTER

Abstract

We study the interplay between magic and entanglement in quantum many-body systems. We show that non-local magic, which is supported by the quantum correlations is lower bounded by the non-flatness of entanglement spectrum and upper bounded by the amount of entanglement in the system. We then argue that a smoothed version of non-local magic bounds the hardness of classical simulations for incompressible states. In conformal field theories, we conjecture that the non-local magic should scale linearly with entanglement entropy but sublinearly when an approximation of the state is allowed. We support the conjectures using both analytical arguments based on unitary distillation and numerical data from an Ising CFT. If the CFT has a holographic dual, then we prove that the non-local magic vanishes if and only if there is no gravitational back-reaction. Furthermore, we show that non-local magic is approximately equal to the rate of change of the minimal surface area in response to the change of cosmic brane tension in the bulk.

*C.C. acknowledges the support by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-19-1-0360), the National Science Foundation (PHY-1733907), and the Commonwealth Cyber Initiative. The Institute for Quantum Information and Matter is an NSF Physics Frontiers Center. AH acknowledges support from PNRR MUR project PE0000023-NQSTI and PNRR MUR project CN 00000013 -ICSC. W.M. is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under grant number DE-SC0019470, and by the Heising-Simons Foundation "Observational Signatures of Quantum Gravity" collaboration grant 2021-2818. S.F.E.O. acknowledges support from PNRR MUR project PE0000023-NQSTI. L.L. is funded through the Munich Quantum Valley project (MQV-K8) by Bayerisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst and DFG (CRC 183).

Publication: Preprint: arXiv:2403.07056

Presenters

  • Gong Cheng

    • Virginia Tech

Authors

  • Gong Cheng

    • Virginia Tech
  • ChunJun (Charles) Cao

    • Virginia Tech
  • Alioscia Hamma

    • Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II
  • Lorenzo Leone

    • University of Massachusetts Boston
  • William R Munizzi

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • Savatore F Oliviero

    • Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche