Monday, October 25 |
07:00 - 08:45 |
Breakfast ↓ Breakfast is served daily between 7 and 9am in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Kinnear Center 105) |
08:45 - 09:00 |
Introduction and Welcome by BIRS Staff ↓ A brief introduction to BIRS with important logistical information, technology instruction, and opportunity for participants to ask questions. (TCPL 201) |
09:00 - 09:40 |
Jan de Boer: Quantum gravity meets statistical physics I ↓ I will describe a general statistical framework which seems to be able to capture many aspects of low-energy gravitational computations and naturally
leads to e.g. ETH and averages of OPE coefficients (TCPL 201) |
09:40 - 10:20 |
Lampros Lamprou: Falling inside holographic black holes ↓ I will present a bulk reconstruction technique in AdS/CFT suitable for addressing a facet of the black hole information problem: how to unambiguously predict the results of measurements accessible to an infalling observer in the black hole interior. (TCPL 201) |
10:20 - 10:50 |
Coffee Break (TCPL 201) |
10:50 - 11:30 |
Ying Zhao: Quantum circuit and matter collisions in the bulk ↓ The Schwarzschild wormhole has been interpreted as an entangled state. If Alice and Bob fall into each of the black hole, they can meet in the interior. We interpret this meeting in terms of the quantum circuit that prepares the entangled state. Alice and Bob create growing perturbations in the circuit, and we argue that the overlap of these perturbations represents their meeting. We identify the post-collision region as the region storing the gates that are not affected by any of the perturbations. We use this picture to analyze how the post-collision region shrinks after strong collisions between two localized shocks and compare it with estimated result from general relativity. We see that there is a boundary mechanism with which bulk matter gravitationally interact: perturbations overlapping in one shared quantum circuit. The same mechanism applies no matter the colliding signals come from the same boundary or different non-interacting boundaries. (Online) |
11:30 - 12:10 |
Geoff Penington: Quantum Minimal Surfaces from Quantum Error Correction ↓ We show that complementary state-specific reconstruction of logical (bulk) operators is equivalent to the existence of a quantum minimal surface prescription for physical (boundary) entropies. This significantly generalizes both sides of an equivalence previously shown by Harlow; in particular, we do not require the entanglement wedge to be the same for all states in the code space. In developing this theorem, we construct an emergent bulk geometry for general quantum codes, defining "areas" associated to arbitrary logical subsystems, and argue that this definition is "functionally unique." We also formalize a definition of bulk reconstruction that we call "state-specific product unitary" reconstruction. This definition captures the quantum error correction (QEC) properties present in holographic codes and has potential independent interest as a very broad generalization of QEC; it includes most traditional versions of QEC as special cases. Our results extend to approximate codes, and even to the "non-isometric codes" that seem to describe the interior of a black hole at late times. (Online) |
12:10 - 13:30 |
Lunch ↓ Lunch is served daily between 11:30am and 1:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Kinnear Center 105) |
13:00 - 13:45 |
Tour of the Banff Centre (PDC Front Desk) |
14:00 - 14:40 |
Xi Dong: Replica Wormholes and Holographic Entanglement Negativity ↓ I will show how to obtain entanglement negativity from replica wormholes in a couple of toy models of evaporating black holes. There are four phases dominated by different geometries. Some of these geometries are new replica wormholes that break the replica symmetry spontaneously. I will also show how to analyze the phase transitions and present enhanced corrections to negativity there. (Online) |
14:40 - 15:20 |
Tom Faulkner: Reflected entropy for random tensor networks ↓ A recipe for computing reflected entropy in random tensor networks is given, confirming the entanglement wedge cross section correspondence.
We then discuss an effective description for the reflected entanglement spectrum that involves a sum over doubled tensor networks with an emergent area operator. (Online) |
15:20 - 15:30 |
Group Photo ↓ Meet in foyer of TCPL to participate in the BIRS group photo. The photograph will be taken outdoors, so dress appropriately for the weather. Please don't be late, or you might not be in the official group photo! (TCPL 201) |
15:30 - 15:50 |
Coffee Break (TCPL 201) |
15:50 - 16:30 |
Adrian Nachman: A Brief Introduction to Mathematical Breakthroughs on Inverse Problems ↓ This will be an overview of some paradigmatic inverse problems in Partial Differential Equations and Differential Geometry, some solved and some yet to be solved. (Online) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner ↓ A buffet dinner is served daily between 5:30pm and 7:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Kinnear Center 105) |