Litcius/Paper detail

Lorentzian Threads as Gatelines and Holographic Complexity

Juan F. Pedraza, Andrea Russo, Andrew Svesko, Zachary Weller-Davies

2021Physical Review Letters44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The continuous min flow-max cut principle is used to reformulate the "complexity=volume" conjecture using Lorentzian flows-divergenceless norm-bounded timelike vector fields whose minimum flux through a boundary subregion is equal to the volume of the homologous maximal bulk Cauchy slice. The nesting property is used to show the rate of complexity is bounded below by "conditional complexity," describing a multistep optimization with intermediate and final target states. Conceptually, discretized Lorentzian flows are interpreted in terms of threads or gatelines such that complexity is equal to the minimum number of gatelines used to prepare a conformal field theory (CFT) state by an optimal tensor network (TN) discretizing the state. We propose a refined measure of complexity, capturing the role of suboptimal TNs, as an ensemble average. The bulk symplectic potential provides a "canonical" thread configuration characterizing perturbations around arbitrary CFT states. Its consistency requires the bulk to obey linearized Einstein's equations, which are shown to be equivalent to the holographic first law of complexity, thereby advocating a notion of "spacetime complexity."

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsConformal mapDiscretizationBounded functionMeasure (data warehouse)Tensor (intrinsic definition)Symplectic geometryBoundary value problemBoundary (topology)Conservation lawCauchy distributionConjectureThread (computing)Mathematical analysisContraction (grammar)Field (mathematics)Theoretical physicsMathematicsQuantum entanglementConformal field theoryState (computer science)ReachabilityComputational complexity theoryHolographyPure mathematicsTensor productCauchy stress tensorQuantum many-body systemsNoncommutative and Quantum Gravity TheoriesBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics