Two things you should know about me are: (1) I have unbounded admiration for scientists who can actually finish writing a book, and (2) I’m a firm believer that exciting progress can be ignited when two fields fuse together. So I’m doubly thrilled that Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter, by IQIM physicist Xie Chen and her colleagues Bei Zeng, Duan-Lu Zhou, and Xiao-Gang Wen, has now been published by Springer.
The authors kindly invited me to write a foreword for the book, which I was happy to contribute. That foreword is reproduced here, with the permission of the publisher.
Foreword
In 1989 I attended a workshop at the University of Minnesota. The organizers had hoped the workshop would spawn new ideas about the origin of high-temperature superconductivity, which had recently been discovered. But I was especially impressed by a talk about the fractional quantum Hall effect by a young physicist named Xiao-Gang Wen.
From Wen I heard for the first time about a concept called topological order. He explained that for some quantum phases of two-dimensional matter the ground state becomes degenerate when the system resides on a surface of nontrivial topology such as a torus, and that the degree of degeneracy provides a useful signature for distinguishing different phases. I was fascinated.
Up until then, studies of phases of matter and the transitions between them usually built on principles annunciated decades earlier by Lev Landau. Landau had emphasized the crucial role of symmetry, and of local order parameters that distinguish different symmetry realizations. Though much of what Wen said went over my head, I did manage to glean that he was proposing a way to distinguish quantum phases founded on much different principles that Landau’s. As a particle physicist I deeply appreciated the power of Landau theory, but I was also keenly aware that the interface of topology and physics had already yielded many novel and fruitful insights.
Mulling over these ideas on the plane ride home, I scribbled a few lines of verse:
Now we are allowed
To disavow Landau.
Wow …
Without knowing where it might lead, one could sense the opening of a new chapter.
At around that same time, another new research direction was beginning to gather steam, the study of quantum information. Richard Feynman and Yuri Manin had suggested that a computer processing quantum information might perform tasks beyond the reach of ordinary digital computers. David Deutsch formalized the idea, which attracted the attention of computer scientists, and eventually led to Peter Shor’s discovery that a quantum computer can factor large numbers in polynomial time. Meanwhile, Alexander Holevo, Charles Bennett and others seized the opportunity to unify Claude Shannon’s information theory with quantum physics, erecting new schemes for quantifying quantum entanglement and characterizing processes in which quantum information is acquired, transmitted, and processed.
The discovery of Shor’s algorithm caused a burst of excitement and activity, but quantum information science remained outside the mainstream of physics, and few scientists at that time glimpsed the rich connections between quantum information and the study of quantum matter. One notable exception was Alexei Kitaev, who had two remarkable insights in the 1990s. He pointed out that finding the ground state energy of a quantum system defined by a “local” Hamiltonian, when suitably formalized, is as hard as any problem whose solution can be verified with a quantum computer. This idea launched the study of Hamiltonian complexity. Kitaev also discerned the relationship between Wen’s concept of topological order and the quantum error-correcting codes that can protect delicate quantum superpositions from the ravages of environmental decoherence. Kitaev’s notion of a topological quantum computer, a mere theorist’s fantasy when proposed in 1997, is by now pursued in experimental laboratories around the world (though the technology still has far to go before truly scalable quantum computers will be capable of addressing hard problems).
Thereafter progress accelerated, led by a burgeoning community of scientists working at the interface of quantum information and quantum matter. Guifre Vidal realized that many-particle quantum systems that are only slightly entangled can be succinctly described using tensor networks. This new method extended the reach of mean-field theory and provided an illuminating new perspective on the successes of the Density Matrix Renormalization Group (DMRG). By proving that the ground state of a local Hamiltonian with an energy gap has limited entanglement (the area law), Matthew Hastings showed that tensor network tools are widely applicable. These tools eventually led to a complete understanding of gapped quantum phases in one spatial dimension.
The experimental discovery of topological insulators focused attention on the interplay of symmetry and topology. The more general notion of a symmetry-protected topological (SPT) phase arose, in which a quantum system has an energy gap in the bulk but supports gapless excitations confined to its boundary which are protected by specified symmetries. (For topological insulators the symmetries are particle-number conservation and time-reversal invariance.) Again, tensor network methods proved to be well suited for establishing a complete classification of one-dimensional SPT phases, and guided progress toward understanding higher dimensions, though many open questions remain.
We now have a much deeper understanding of topological order than when I first heard about it from Wen nearly 30 years ago. A central new insight is that topologically ordered systems have long-range entanglement, and that the entanglement has universal properties, like topological entanglement entropy, which are insensitive to the microscopic details of the Hamiltonian. Indeed, topological order is an intrinsic property of a quantum state and can be identified without reference to any particular Hamiltonian at all. To understand the meaning of long-range entanglement, imagine a quantum computer which applies a sequence of geometrically local operations to an input quantum state, producing an output product state which is completely disentangled. If the time required to complete this disentangling computation is independent of the size of the system, then we say the input state is short-ranged entangled; otherwise it is long-range entangled. More generally (loosely speaking), two states are in different quantum phases if no constant-time quantum computation can convert one state to the other. This fundamental connection between quantum computation and quantum order has many ramifications which are explored in this book.
When is the right time for a book that summarizes the status of an ongoing research area? It’s a subtle question. The subject should be sufficiently mature that enduring concepts and results can be identified and clearly explained. If the pace of progress is sufficiently rapid, and the topics emphasized are not well chosen, then an ill-timed book might become obsolete quickly. On the other hand, the subject ought not to be too mature; only if there are many exciting open questions to attack will the book be likely to attract a sizable audience eager to master the material.
I feel confident that Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter is appearing at an opportune time, and that the authors have made wise choices about what to include. They are world-class experts, and are themselves responsible for many of the scientific advances explained here. The student or senior scientist who studies this book closely will be well grounded in the tools and ideas at the forefront of current research at the confluence of quantum information science and quantum condensed matter physics.
Indeed, I expect that in the years ahead a steadily expanding community of scientists, including computer scientists, chemists, and high-energy physicists, will want to be well acquainted with the ideas at the heart of Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter. In particular, growing evidence suggests that the quantum physics of spacetime itself is an emergent manifestation of long-range quantum entanglement in an underlying more fundamental quantum theory. More broadly, as quantum technology grows ever more sophisticated, I believe that the theoretical and experimental study of highly complex many-particle systems will be an increasingly central theme of 21st century physical science. It that’s true, Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter is bound to hold an honored place on the bookshelves of many scientists for years to come.
John Preskill
Pasadena, California
September 2018
“Without knowing where it might lead, one could sense the opening of a new chapter”, so reads the Preface to “Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter”, a book exploring the world of the very small.
The above statement is also apropos to the world of the very large, where gains are being made by LIGO-Virgo, etc. On this cosmic scale, one scheme, among undoubtedly many, under which a new chapter could also unfold, may take the form of “a block of Swiss cheese”, briefly touched on in https://quantumfrontiers.com/2018/05/20/a-quantum-podcast/#comment-138457/.
Speculative no doubt, that Swiss cheese scheme, which has no known connection to any similarly named models, takes seriously the following six notions:
1) Wormholes can be interpreted to be equivalent to entanglement (Maldacena and Susskind, arxiv: 1306.0533v2).
2) Black holes, and wormholes linking them, are part of quantum reality (https://quantumfrontiers.com/2018/05/20/a-quantum-podcast/#comment-138457).
3) Quantum reality cannot be the physical reality in classical physics (https://quantumfrontiers.com/2018/11/25/theoretical-physics-has-not-gone-to-the-dogs/comment-page-1/#comment-117520).
4) Quantum reality is more fundamental than classical reality (https://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2018/01/17/beyond-falsifiability/comment-page-2/#comment-7295910552604315312).
5) Classical reality emerges from quantum reality via entanglement (https://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2018/02/08/why-is-there-something-rather-than-nothing-2/comment-page-5/#comment-7295910552604315547).
6) Photon speed limit, in part per light cone considerations, defines local “causal neighborhoods” within the “block of cheese” (https://quantumfrontiers.com/2018/05/20/a-quantum-podcast/#comment-138457).
Among items highlighted in the “Preface” are short-range and long-range entanglement. Other than finding utility in “Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter”, they may be helpful in the “Swiss cheese” Universe as well. In that Universe, the wormhole-black hole network throughout the “cheese” could be viewed as a many-body entangled whole, within which both long range and short range entanglement could be present.
In particular, long-range entanglement, being associated with spacetime emergence, may point a way towards unification. Specifically, by recognizing quantum as the fundamental reality (notion no. 4), this “Swiss cheese” model illustrates how classical reality could emerge as a subset of quantum reality (notion no. 5). Namely, spacetime, among other classical items, could emerge from quantum reality, anywhere an entanglement occurs.
That brings up “What surrounds the cheese?” asked in https://quantumfrontiers.com/2018/05/20/a-quantum-podcast/. Consistent with being the primary reality, together with its central role in this scheme, quantum reality could well include the “cheese wrapper” itself. If so, the following could illustrate how classical and quantum interact in this Swiss cheese scheme.
A “cheese wrapper” belonging to quantum reality not only could spawn classical reality in the form of “cheese”, by being in communication with the wormhole-black hole network (which is also quantum per notion no. 2), quantum-to-classical emergence can take place anywhere inside and outside the cheese. In fact, anywhere entanglement occurs, classical reality emerges per notion no. 5. In practice, that means wherever two items interact in nonphysical quantum reality, physical classical items emerge, regardless of location.
Being “nonphysical”, the “wrapper” could extend indefinitely in all directions from the cheese block. Back inside the cheese, all singularities are rendered harmless, by being part of a nonphysical quantum reality (notion no. 2). Thus, this scheme not only brings classical and quantum together, it actually makes whole Einstein’s classical physics by ridding it of physical infinities. Meanwhile, all the successes of classical physics are preserved because as soon as any physical entity emerges from nonphysical quantum reality, Einstein’s rules hold.
So far, only a one-way street has been described: quantum to classical. Traffic in the opposite direction could take place where time, and therefore spacetime, stops (https://quantumfrontiers.com/2019/01/27/humans-can-intuit-quantum-physics/comment-page-1/#comment-127080). One such location is a black hole. Since the latter is part of quantum reality in this scheme, that is one place where classical “returns” to quantum. The same can actually happen at any horizon, be it the event horizon or the observable horizon (https://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2018/01/17/beyond-falsifiability/#comments). With two-way traffic in place, information is never lost, overall.
To be noted is that physical boundaries need not exist either inside or outside the cheese. Outside, the so-called “wrapper”, being nonphysical, is immune from needing any physical boundary. Inside the cheese, all horizons, including observable horizons (between causal neighborhoods), and event horizons (around black holes), could arise as a result of the photon speed limit. Specifically, for the observable and event horizons, items in respectively expanding or receding space, could move away from each other at faster than the speed of light. That gives rise to both a causality boundary and an apparent physical boundary. This may also be understood by contrasting local vs. God’s-eye view (cheese block-wide) perspectives (https://www.preposterousuniverse.com/blog/2018/01/17/beyond-falsifiability/#comment-7295910552604315297).
This unification scheme not only preserves all the successes of classical physics, it also makes whole where classical physics literally fails, as noted above. What has made this Swiss cheese scheme possible is the thought experiment demonstrating why quantum reality cannot be the physical reality in classical physics (notion no. 3). Everything else flows from that conclusion, and is realizing application in a widening range of situations.
By offering a quantum rather than a classical description of reality, this scheme happens to turn the tables on Einstein, who favored a classical description, labeling the quantum one “incomplete”. Ever since, adhering to Einstein’s preference, when it comes to unification, there is a tendency to make quantum obey classical physics laws. This Swiss cheese proposal is an exception.
As new chapters get written, on both the very small and the very large, the unification scheme outlined above may facilitate such chapters to complement each other. For example, where CERN encounters cul-de-sacs, LIGO-Virgo and EHT etc., in the context of this model Universe, may provide an alternate “laboratory” to verify ideas in “Quantum Information Meets Quantum Matter”, and vice versa. Hopefully, the very small and the very large may be understood, together, as one. Alas, any new attempt could be wrong. This one is certainly no exception.