How is quantum information localized in gravity?

William Donnelly and Steven B. Giddings
Phys. Rev. D 96, 086013 – Published 17 October 2017

Abstract

A notion of localization of information within quantum subsystems plays a key role in describing the physics of quantum systems, and in particular is a prerequisite for discussing important concepts such as entanglement and information transfer. While subsystems can be readily defined for finite quantum systems and in local quantum field theory, a corresponding definition for gravitational systems is significantly complicated by the apparent nonlocality arising due to gauge invariance, enforced by the constraints. A related question is whether “soft hair” encodes otherwise localized information, and the question of such localization also remains an important puzzle for proposals that gravity emerges from another structure such as a boundary field theory as in AdS/CFT. This paper describes different approaches to defining local subsystem structure, and shows that at least classically, perturbative gravity has localized subsystems based on a split structure, generalizing the split property of quantum field theory. This, and related arguments for QED, give simple explanations that in these theories there is localized information that is independent of fields outside a region, in particular so that there is no role for “soft hair” in encoding such information. Additional subtleties appear in quantum gravity. We argue that localized information exists in perturbative quantum gravity in the presence of global symmetries, but that nonperturbative dynamics is likely tied to a modification of such structure.

  • Received 23 June 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.96.086013

© 2017 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

  1. Research Areas
Gravitation, Cosmology & AstrophysicsQuantum Information, Science & TechnologyParticles & Fields

Authors & Affiliations

William Donnelly*

  • Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA

Steven B. Giddings

  • Department of Physics and Kavli Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA

  • *donnelly@physics.ucsb.edu
  • giddings@ucsb.edu

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Issue

Vol. 96, Iss. 8 — 15 October 2017

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