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Quantum Simulation
Entanglement Entropy of Systems with Spontaneously Broken Continuous Symmetry
arXiv
Authors: Max A. Metlitski, Tarun Grover
Year
2011
Paper ID
31074
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
156
Citations
N/A
Abstract
We study entanglement properties of systems with spontaneously broken continuous symmetry. We find that in addition to the expected area law behavior, the entanglement entropy contains a subleading contribution which diverges logarithmically with the subsystem size in agreement with the Monte Carlo simulations of A. Kallin et. al. (Phys. Rev. B 84, 165134 (2011)). The coefficient of the logarithm is a universal number given simply by NG (d-1)/2, where NG is the number of Goldstone modes and d is the spatial dimension. This term is present even when the subsystem boundary is straight and contains no corners, and its origin lies in the interplay of Goldstone modes and restoration of symmetry in a finite volume. We also compute the "low-energy" part of the entanglement spectrum and show that it has the same characteristic "tower of states" form as the physical low-energy spectrum obtained when a system with spontaneously broken continuous symmetry is placed in a finite volume.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- We study entanglement properties of systems with spontaneously broken continuous symmetry.
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