Observables in Quantum Gravity: from Theory to Experiment
from
Sunday 12 January 2025 (17:00)
to
Friday 17 January 2025 (13:00)
Monday 6 January 2025
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Tuesday 7 January 2025
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Wednesday 8 January 2025
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Thursday 9 January 2025
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Friday 10 January 2025
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Saturday 11 January 2025
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Sunday 12 January 2025
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17:00
Welcome Reception
Welcome Reception
17:00 - 19:00
Monday 13 January 2025
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08:35
Opening Remarks
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Antony Speranza
Opening Remarks
Antony Speranza
08:35 - 08:45
08:45
Hong Liu - Emergence of spacetime in holography
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Hong Liu
Hong Liu - Emergence of spacetime in holography
Hong Liu
08:45 - 09:30
09:30
Morning break
Morning break
09:30 - 10:00
10:00
Molly Kaplan - De Sitter quantum gravity and the emergence of local algebras
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Molly Kaplan
Molly Kaplan - De Sitter quantum gravity and the emergence of local algebras
Molly Kaplan
10:00 - 10:45
Quantum theories of gravity are generally expected to have some degree of nonlocality, with familiar local physics emerging only in a particular limit. Perturbative quantum gravity around backgrounds with isometries and compact Cauchy slices provides an interesting laboratory in which this emergence can be explored. In this context, the remaining isometries are gauge symmetries and, as a result, gauge-invariant observables cannot be localized. Instead, local physics can arise only through certain relational constructions. In this talk, we explore such issues for perturbative quantum gravity around de Sitter space. In particular, we describe a class of gauge-invariant observables which, under appropriate conditions, provide good approximations to certain algebras of local fields. Our results suggest that, near any minimal hypersphere in dS, this approximation can be accurate only over regions in which the corresponding global time coordinate spans an interval of order ln G^(-1). In contrast, however, we find that the approximation can be accurate over arbitrarily large regions of global dS so long as those regions are located far to the future or past of such a minimal sphere. This talk is based on the paper arXiv:2410.00111 with Donald Marolf, Xuyang Yu, and Ying Zhao.
10:45
Steve Giddings - Quantum gravity observables: observation, algebras, and mathematical structure
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Steve Giddings
Steve Giddings - Quantum gravity observables: observation, algebras, and mathematical structure
Steve Giddings
10:45 - 11:30
11:30
Midday break
Midday break
11:30 - 16:30
16:30
Bryce Kobrin and Trond Anderson - Towards new applications with hybrid analog-digital quantum simulators
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Bryce Kobrin
Trond Anderson
Bryce Kobrin and Trond Anderson - Towards new applications with hybrid analog-digital quantum simulators
Bryce Kobrin
Trond Anderson
16:30 - 17:30
Quantum simulators offer the potential to explore correlated quantum phenomena with greater flexibility and control than found in the natural world. In this two-part talk, we present an overview of recent theoretical and experimental advances in quantum simulation. We first discuss the development of microscopic holographic models and efforts to probe gravitational-like dynamics via many-body quantum teleportation in the so-called traversable wormhole circuit. We outline connections between many-body teleportation and operator growth, identify distinct mechanisms that enable teleportation, and comment on recent experiments that realize the teleportation protocol in digital quantum processors. In the second part, we present the recent development of a hybrid analog-digital quantum simulator comprising 69 superconducting qubits which supports both universal quantum gates and high-fidelity analog evolution. We compare the performance of the hybrid simulator to a digital quantum processor and demonstrate beyond-classical performance in cross-entropy benchmarking experiments. Leveraging the great versatility of this hybrid platform, we also probe thermalization dynamics, energy transport, and critical phenomena in the XY-model, revealing a breakdown of the Kibble-Zurek mechanism. Taken together, our discussion highlights the possibilities and challenges of simulating interacting quantum systems, including dynamical phenomena inspired by quantum theories of gravity.
17:30
Evening Break
Evening Break
17:30 - 18:00
18:00
Brian Swingle - Statistical Probes of the Black Hole Interior
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Brian Swingle
Brian Swingle - Statistical Probes of the Black Hole Interior
Brian Swingle
18:00 - 18:45
From the outside, black holes can be viewed as rapidly thermalizing quantum many-body systems. The interior of the black hole is more mysterious. We discuss concrete exterior observables which are precisely related to the interior geometry and allow us to probe its growth. The twist is that these observables are statistical and involve many identical copies of the black hole. We also discuss how these results fit into the "quantum gravity in the lab" program.
20:00
Happy hour - Mi Chola restaurant
Happy hour - Mi Chola restaurant
20:00 - 22:00
Tuesday 14 January 2025
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08:45
Jake Taylor - Pushing the experimental limits for testing quantum aspects of gravity
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Jake Taylor
Jake Taylor - Pushing the experimental limits for testing quantum aspects of gravity
Jake Taylor
08:45 - 09:30
09:30
Morning Break
Morning Break
09:30 - 10:00
10:00
Markus Aspelmeyer - Quantum sources of gravity in table-top experiments: status & challenges
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Markus Aspelmeyer
Markus Aspelmeyer - Quantum sources of gravity in table-top experiments: status & challenges
Markus Aspelmeyer
10:00 - 10:45
10:45
Sander Vermeulen - Photon Counting Interferometry to Detect Geontropic Space-Time Fluctuations with GQuEST
Sander Vermeulen - Photon Counting Interferometry to Detect Geontropic Space-Time Fluctuations with GQuEST
10:45 - 11:30
The GQuEST experiment uses tabletop-scale Michelson laser interferometers to probe for fluctuations in space-time. We present a new experimental technique, called `photon counting interferometry’, which yields sensitivity beyond the interferometric standard quantum limit. We will implement this technique to search for individual photons produced by hypothetical `geontropic’ space-time fluctuations, as proposed by Verlinde & Zurek. Our photon-counting readout design uses optical cavities to filter out quantum shot noise, a noise source that limits gravitational-wave detectors such as LIGO. Photon-counting readout fundamentally outperforms quantum squeezing, and is the optimal quantum metrology scheme to measure stochastic signals, such as space-time fluctuations. The GQuEST experiment thus enables a practicable search for signatures of quantum gravity in a laboratory-scale experiment.
11:30
Midday Break
Midday Break
11:30 - 16:30
16:30
Mark Van Raamsdonk - Cosmology from holography
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Mark Van Raamsdonk
Mark Van Raamsdonk - Cosmology from holography
Mark Van Raamsdonk
16:30 - 17:15
I will describe how the standard tools of holography might be used to define microscopic models of big-bang cosmology. I discuss ``local'' models where a bubble of the cosmological spacetime is embedded in an asymptotically AdS spacetime, and ``global'' models where the full spacetime is encoded in some auxiliary degrees of freedom. While the gravitational effective field theories arising from holographic models have negative cosmological constant, generic cosmological solutions have scalar fields evolving on cosmological time scales that can give late time acceleration. If a model of this type describes nature, a generic prediction is a decreasing dark energy. We present evidence that such a decrease is suggested by supernova and BAO data.
17:15
Batoul Banihashemi - Gravitational ensembles with conformal boundaries
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Batoul Banihashemi
Batoul Banihashemi - Gravitational ensembles with conformal boundaries
Batoul Banihashemi
17:15 - 18:00
We study thermodynamics of gravitational systems with conformal boundary conditions, where the conformal class of the boundary metric and the trace of the extrinsic curvature K are held fixed. In the high temperature limit the series of subextensive terms in the free energy are compared to predictions from thermal effective field theory. In all considered cases there is agreement in the structure of the high temperature expansion. Interestingly, the first subextensive correction to the free energy is negative, violating a conjectured bound on this coefficient in quantum field theory. We interpret this as a signal that gravity does not fully decouple in the putative boundary dual. Ensembles with negative K are tied to solutions with cosmic-type horizons, where the system boundary is smaller than the horizon. In some cases, these solutions dominate the phase diagram and are necessary for consistency with thermal effective field theory.
18:00
Poster Session
Poster Session
18:00 - 19:00
Wednesday 15 January 2025
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08:45
Ben Freivogel - Quantum Widths of the Black Hole Horizon
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Ben Freivogel
Ben Freivogel - Quantum Widths of the Black Hole Horizon
Ben Freivogel
08:45 - 09:30
How large are quantum fluctuations in the location of the black hole horizon? I will describe ongoing work addressing this question, sometimes called the `quantum width' of the black hole horizon. I will connect to recent work by Bousso-Penington and Parikh-Pereira, as well as older work of Marolf, which define different quantum widths for the black hole horizon.
09:30
Morning Break
Morning Break
09:30 - 10:00
10:00
Jordan Wilson-Gerow - Decoherence by warm horizons
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Jordan Wilson-Gerow
Jordan Wilson-Gerow - Decoherence by warm horizons
Jordan Wilson-Gerow
10:00 - 10:45
Recently Danielson, Satishchandran, and Wald (DSW) have shown that quantum superpositions held outside of Killing horizons will decohere at a steady rate. This occurs because of the inevitable radiation of soft photons (gravitons), which imprint an electromagnetic (gravitational) ``which-path'' memory onto the horizon. Rather than appealing to this global description, an experimenter ought to also have a local description for the cause of decoherence. One might intuitively guess that this is just the bombardment of Hawking/Unruh radiation on the system, however simple calculations challenge this idea -- the same superposition held in a finite temperature inertial laboratory does not decohere at the DSW rate. In this work we provide a local description of the decoherence by mapping the DSW set-up onto a worldline-localized model resembling an Unruh-DeWitt particle detector. We present an interpretation in terms of random local forces which do not sufficiently self-average over long times. Using the Rindler horizon as a concrete example we clarify the crucial role of temperature, and show that the Unruh effect is the only quantum mechanical effect underlying these random forces. A general lesson is that for an environment which induces Ohmic friction on the central system (as one gets from the classical Abraham-Lorentz-Dirac force, in an accelerating frame) the fluctuation-dissipation theorem implies that when this environment is at finite temperature it will cause steady decoherence on the central system. Our results agree with DSW and provide a complementary local perspective.
10:45
Daine Danielson - Horizon Algebras and Soft Quantum Information
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Daine Danielson
Daine Danielson - Horizon Algebras and Soft Quantum Information
Daine Danielson
10:45 - 11:30
We consider a thought experiment in which an experimenter, Alice, creates a spatial superposition of a charged (or massive) particle in the vicinity of a Killing horizon. This gives rise to a superposition of soft electromagnetic (or gravitational) field configurations on the black hole horizon, in a direct analog to the memory effect at null infinity. We use the quantum fidelity to compute the distinguishability of the resulting states of the black hole interior. The analysis of this—which has historically been obstructed by infrared divergences—can be carried out by extending the algebra of observables beyond the usual algebra of compactly supported observables, to include unitary algebra elements that produce noncompact field configurations on the horizon. In fact, we find that certain quantum information theoretic quantities are generically easier to compute in this enlarged algebra, and that analogous “horizon algebras” arise on de Sitter horizons and at null infinity. After Alice has held her superposition open for a given proper time, we compute the distinguishability of the resulting interior states, according to any spacelike observer Bob (or family of observers) allowed to carry out optimal measurements in the black hole interior. The resulting distinguishability is shown to be precisely equal to the decoherence of Alice’s superposition in the exterior.
11:30
Midday Break
Midday Break
11:30 - 16:30
17:30
Public Lecture - Dan Carney - 100 Years of Quantum Space-time: from Theory to Experiment
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Dan Carney
Public Lecture - Dan Carney - 100 Years of Quantum Space-time: from Theory to Experiment
Dan Carney
17:30 - 18:30
Thursday 16 January 2025
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08:45
Philipp Hoehn - Gravitational algebras, entropies, and quantum reference frames
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Philipp Hoehn
Philipp Hoehn - Gravitational algebras, entropies, and quantum reference frames
Philipp Hoehn
08:45 - 09:30
I will explain how the recent discussion about observers and crossed product algebras in perturbative quantum gravity is related to quantum reference frames and how this leads to an observer-dependence of gravitational entropies. (Based on 2405.00114; 2412.15502; 2411.19931)
09:30
Morning Break
Morning Break
09:30 - 10:00
10:00
Eugenia Colafranceschi - Constructing observables in quantum gravity: an axiomatic path integral approach
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Eugenia Colafranceschi
Eugenia Colafranceschi - Constructing observables in quantum gravity: an axiomatic path integral approach
Eugenia Colafranceschi
10:00 - 10:45
10:45
Elliott Gesteau - Limits of observables and the emergence of causality
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Elliott Gesteau
Elliott Gesteau - Limits of observables and the emergence of causality
Elliott Gesteau
10:45 - 11:30
11:30
Midday Break
Midday Break
11:30 - 16:30
16:30
Daniel Green - Cosmological Observables and their Quantum Origins
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Daniel Green
Daniel Green - Cosmological Observables and their Quantum Origins
Daniel Green
16:30 - 17:15
The maps of the Universe made by cosmic surveys are classical, both in principle and in practice. This obscures the quantum origin of structure our Universe from inflation but simplifies the physical interpretation of the observables. I will review recent progress in connecting observable quantities measured in current and future surveys to deeper principles about the structure of physical laws. I will also discuss how the quantities relevant to cosmological correlators manifest themselves in other observables in cosmological and asymptotically flat backgrounds.
17:15
Evening Break
Evening Break
17:15 - 17:45
17:45
Kathryn Zurek - The quantum mechanics of a causal diamond
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Kathryn Zurek
Kathryn Zurek - The quantum mechanics of a causal diamond
Kathryn Zurek
17:45 - 18:30
19:00
Banquet - Aspen Meadows
Banquet - Aspen Meadows
19:00 - 21:00
Friday 17 January 2025
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08:45
Andrew Lucas - The reconstruction map in JT gravity
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Andrew Lucas
Andrew Lucas - The reconstruction map in JT gravity
Andrew Lucas
08:45 - 09:30
An open question in AdS/CFT is how to reconstruct semiclassical bulk operators precisely enough that non-perturbative quantum effects can be computed. We propose a set of physically-motivated requirements for this reconstruction map, and we explicitly construct a map satisfying these requirements in JT gravity. Intuitively, our map is found by canonically quantizing a canonically-transformed classical JT Hamiltonian in a box (rather than on a line). The canonical transformation is chosen to ensure the correct spectrum of the fundamental quantum theory. We then obtain analytical predictions for the dynamics of the wormhole length, including its quantum fluctuations, by using our reconstruction map along with techniques from quantum ergodicity theory. The random matrix statistics of non-perturbative JT implies that the average wormhole length is non-monotonic in time, which provides a non-trivial prediction of our formalism.
09:30
Midday Break
Midday Break
09:30 - 10:00
10:00
Julian Sonner - Quantum simulating holographic duality
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Julian Sonner
Julian Sonner - Quantum simulating holographic duality
Julian Sonner
10:00 - 10:45
Holographic duality posits that quantum gravity under the assumption of certain boundary conditions is described by strongly interacting quantum matter. In the context of a theory-experiment consortium (Lausanne-Geneva-Trento-Zürich), we aim to quantum simulate the arguably simplest instance of such a holographic many-body phase by using ultra cold Fermions in a high-finesse optical cavity. In this talk I will describe our recent work, which aims to synthetically realise quenched disorder quantum many-body systems, including the so-called Dirac-SYK (Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev) class of models in single-mode optical cavities.
10:45
Jonathan Jeffrey - Towards Holography with Cold Atoms in a Cavity
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Jonathan Jeffrey
Jonathan Jeffrey - Towards Holography with Cold Atoms in a Cavity
Jonathan Jeffrey
10:45 - 11:30
Probing the holographic principle on a physical platform requires tailored interactions between boundary degrees of freedom to produce a gravitational bulk. Our group has demonstrated programmable nonlocal interactions and control of the entanglement between clusters of cold atoms, and probed the emergence of a treelike bulk geometry inspired by p-adic AdS/CFT. Here, we discuss future directions to study holography in our cavity system. The proposed scheme is to engineer MERA-inspired couplings, whereupon bulk measurement induces a boundary state with power-law correlations whose continuum limit is conjectured to be dual to AdS. We describe routes to bulk reconstruction by computing the entanglement entropies of the boundary state.