Statistical mechanics, Algebra, and Geometry
from
Sunday 2 February 2025 (19:00)
to
Friday 7 February 2025 (14:00)
Monday 27 January 2025
Tuesday 28 January 2025
Wednesday 29 January 2025
Thursday 30 January 2025
Friday 31 January 2025
Saturday 1 February 2025
Sunday 2 February 2025
Monday 3 February 2025
09:00
The complex Liouville string
The complex Liouville string
09:00 - 10:00
10:15
Symmetric Orbfiolds, thermal universality and stringy von Neumann algebras
-
Alexandre Belin
(
Universita & INFN, Milano-Bicocca (IT)
)
Symmetric Orbfiolds, thermal universality and stringy von Neumann algebras
Alexandre Belin
(
Universita & INFN, Milano-Bicocca (IT)
)
10:15 - 11:15
Symmetric orbifolds are 2d CFTs with universal properties in the large N limit, mimicking many desired properties of holographic CFTs. In particular, the thermal partition function is universal and agrees with that of 3D gravity. I will present some new results for the universality of symmetric orbiflds: the thermal correlation functions at large N agree with those on the BTZ background. Along the way, I will also discuss other results for correlation functions in heavy states which, even though they never dominate the canonical ensemble, still display universality. I will then interpret these results in terms of von Neumann algebras, in a context where the bulk dual is known to be a tensionless string in AdS_3.
16:00
TBA
-
Jan de Boer
(
Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL)
)
TBA
Jan de Boer
(
Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL)
)
16:00 - 17:00
17:15
A microscopic model of de Sitter spacetime with an observer
-
Herman Verlinde
(
Princeton University
)
A microscopic model of de Sitter spacetime with an observer
Herman Verlinde
(
Princeton University
)
17:15 - 18:15
I describe a simple microscopic quantum mechanical model of low-dimensional de Sitter holography with an observer. Using semiclassical gravity and elementary thermodynamic considerations, I’ll derive a formula for the total entropy of a 3D de Sitter universe with an observer. I then show that this entropy formula exactly matches the known spectral density of the double scaled SYK model.
20:30
discussion
-
participants
discussion
participants
20:30 - 21:30
Tuesday 4 February 2025
09:00
Gravitational Boundary Modes in Finite Volume
-
Ruben Monten
(
CERN
)
Gravitational Boundary Modes in Finite Volume
Ruben Monten
(
CERN
)
09:00 - 10:00
n order to understand the structure of the Hilbert space of gravitational theories, we study one of its universal sectors: the “large gauge” modes, which live on (asymptotic) boundaries. For low-dimensional AdS gravity, we can move them away from the conformal boundary and find that the resulting theory is related to the $T \bar{T}$ deformation. I will discuss how this “beyond-Wilsonian” theory organizes itself, using its symmetries as a guide to examine how local it is and where it starts to differ from the classical expectation.
10:15
Chaos, Eigenstate Thermalization, and 3D Gravity
-
Diego Liska
(
Universite de Geneve (CH)
)
Chaos, Eigenstate Thermalization, and 3D Gravity
Diego Liska
(
Universite de Geneve (CH)
)
10:15 - 11:15
In recent years, it has become clear that the path integral of semiclassical 3D gravity offers a "coarse-grained" description of its holographic 2D CFT. This relationship is particularly transparent when considering the statistical moments of operator product expansion (OPE) coefficients in the CFT. In this talk, I will explore the statistical properties of OPE coefficients through the perspective of quantum chaos. I will introduce an ensemble of OPE data defined as the minimal solution to crossing consistent with approximate unitary invariance. Notably, this ensemble is constructed without relying on any specific matrix or tensor model. The ensemble predicts new contributions to the sum over topologies in 3D gravity, which are precisely realised by novel topologies in the bulk.
16:00
Krylov complexity and the bulk Hilbert space of DSSYK
-
Ruth Shir
Krylov complexity and the bulk Hilbert space of DSSYK
Ruth Shir
16:00 - 17:00
Within the framework of the AdS/CFT correspondence, the time dynamics of black holes in the bulk hints to the existence of boundary observables that evolve for very long time-scales. It was conjectured that quantum complexity has the correct features to be a candidate boundary observable. However, none of the proposed notions of quantum complexity yielded a precise bulk-boundary correspondence until recently. In this talk we will provide such a precise match by focusing on a particular notion of quantum complexity, known as Krylov complexity. We will begin with an overview of this boundary observable and of its properties for chaotic and integrable quantum systems. We will then focus on double-scaled SYK (DSSYK) and show how the so-called chord basis fits naturally within the Krylov construction. We will show that in the limit where DSSYK is dual to JT gravity, Krylov complexity of the infinite-temperature thermofield double state evolving in time on the boundary has a precise gravitational description in the bulk — making it the first microscopic instance of complexity to have a precise geometric description. Finally, we will discuss Krylov complexity for the time evolution of an operator in DSSYK. We will show that also in this case, in the limit associated with gravity, Krylov complexity has a well-defined geometric interpretation in the bulk.
17:15
poster session
-
participants
poster session
participants
17:15 - 18:15
20:30
discussion
-
participants
discussion
participants
20:30 - 21:30
Wednesday 5 February 2025
09:00
Bra-Ket Wormholes
-
Joshua Kames King
Bra-Ket Wormholes
Joshua Kames King
09:00 - 10:00
Based on 2408.08351 and some work in progress. We study a model for the initial state of the universe based on a gravitational path integral that includes connected geometries which simultaneously produce bra and ket of the wave function. We argue that a natural object to describe this state is the Wigner distribution, which is a function on a classical phase space obtained by a certain integral transform of the density matrix. We work with Lorentzian de Sitter Jackiw-Teitelboim gravity in which we find semiclassical saddle-points for pure gravity, as well as when we include matter components such as a CFT and a classical inflaton field. We also discuss different choices of fixing time reparametrizations. In the regime of large universes our connected geometry dominates over the Hartle-Hawking saddle and gives a distribution that has a meaningful probabilistic interpretation for local observables. It does not, however, give a normalizable probability measure on the entire phase space of the theory.
10:15
Spinning up the black hole – string correspondence
-
Andrea Puhm
Spinning up the black hole – string correspondence
Andrea Puhm
10:15 - 11:15
The correspondence principle between strings and black holes is a general framework for matching black holes and massive states of fundamental strings at a point where their physical properties (such as mass, entropy and temperature) smoothly agree with each other. As such it offers a statistical interpretation of black hole entropy. I will discuss the extension of this correspondence principle to rotating black holes and strings. Several puzzles arise when attempting to include rotation, but they can be resolved by adding novel ingredients to the correspondence: dynamical features, non-stationary configurations and shapes of strings and black holes. As a test of this proposal I will compare the sizes of rotating strings and black holes for small, typical, and large values of the angular momentum.
20:30
discussion
discussion
20:30 - 21:30
Thursday 6 February 2025
09:00
Stringy Causal Structure from Algebras”
-
Nima Lashkari
Stringy Causal Structure from Algebras”
Nima Lashkari
09:00 - 10:00
We will discuss the emergence of Stringy spacetime from the chaos in modular flow of future algebras. We will discuss the modular ergodic hierarchy, and prove a sufficient condition for the emergence of Stringy AdS_2 from modular intersections.
10:15
An intrinsic cosmological observer
-
Antony Speranza
(
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
)
An intrinsic cosmological observer
Antony Speranza
(
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
)
10:15 - 11:15
There has been much recent interest in the necessity to include an observer degree of freedom in the description of local algebras in semiclassical gravity. In this talk, I will describe an example where the observer can be constructed intrinsically from the quantum fields. This construction involves the slow-roll inflation example recently analyzed by Chen and Penington, in which the gauge-invariant gravitational algebra arises from averaging over modular flow in a local patch. I will relate this procedure to the Connes-Takesaki theory of the flow of weights for type III von Neumann algebras, and further show that the resulting gravitational algebra can naturally be presented as a crossed product. This leads to a decomposition of the gravitational algebra into quantum field and observer degrees of freedom, with different choice of observer being related to changes in frame for the algebra. I will also connect this example to other constructions of type II algebras in semiclassical gravity, and argue they all share the common feature of being the result of gauging modular flow.
16:00
TBA
-
Daniel Jafferis
TBA
Daniel Jafferis
16:00 - 17:00
17:15
Strings from Feynman Diagrams
-
Edward Mazenc
(
ETH Zürich
)
Strings from Feynman Diagrams
Edward Mazenc
(
ETH Zürich
)
17:15 - 18:15
Over 50 years ago, 't Hooft observed the similarity between the Feynman diagram expansion of a large N gauge theory and the topological expansion of a string theory. The purpose of this talk is to make this idea precise for a protected subsector of the AdS/CFT correspondence. Concretely, we show how the Feynman diagram expansion of correlation functions in N=4 SYM preserving half the supersymmetry can be explicitly recast as a dual sum over closed strings. Each individual Feynman diagram maps on to one worldsheet configuration. The weight of the diagram translates to the exponential of the Nambu-Goto action of the dual string.
20:30
discussion
-
participants
discussion
participants
20:30 - 21:30
Friday 7 February 2025
09:00
Thermal Bootstrap of Matrix Quantum Mechanics
-
Barak Gabai
(
EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH)
)
Thermal Bootstrap of Matrix Quantum Mechanics
Barak Gabai
(
EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH)
)
09:00 - 10:00
I will explain the implementation of a bootstrap method that combines Schwinger-Dyson equations, thermal inequalities, and semidefinite relaxations of matrix logarithm in the ungauged one-matrix quantum mechanics, at finite rank N as well as in the large N limit, to determine finite temperature observables. I will show plots of these observables (determined using the bootstrap) that interpolate between available analytic results in the low and high temperature limits respectively as well as bounds on thermal phase transitions. Finally, I will show preliminary results in the ungauged two-matrix quantum mechanics.
10:15
Operator product expansion, geodesics and black hole singularities
-
Andrei Parnachev
Operator product expansion, geodesics and black hole singularities
Andrei Parnachev
10:15 - 11:15
We observe features of black hole singularities in finite temperature holographic correlators of generic scalar operators. We also elucidate the relation between geodesics in the AdS-Schwarzschild background and the Operator Product Expansion in the boundary CFT.