Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples

Motivated by the increasing connections between information theory and high-energy physics, particularly in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence, we explore the information geometry associated to a variety of simple systems. By studying their Fisher metrics, we derive some general lessons that...

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Main Author: Johanna Erdmenger, Kevin T. Grosvenor, Ro Jefferson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SciPost 2020-05-01
Series:SciPost Physics
Online Access:https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.8.5.073
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spelling doaj-28357f55effd49ac89d44fbf5cab56bf2020-11-25T02:12:53ZengSciPostSciPost Physics2542-46532020-05-018507310.21468/SciPostPhys.8.5.073Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examplesJohanna Erdmenger, Kevin T. Grosvenor, Ro JeffersonMotivated by the increasing connections between information theory and high-energy physics, particularly in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence, we explore the information geometry associated to a variety of simple systems. By studying their Fisher metrics, we derive some general lessons that may have important implications for the application of information geometry in holography. We begin by demonstrating that the symmetries of the physical theory under study play a strong role in the resulting geometry, and that the appearance of an AdS metric is a relatively general feature. We then investigate what information the Fisher metric retains about the physics of the underlying theory by studying the geometry for both the classical 2d Ising model and the corresponding 1d free fermion theory, and find that the curvature diverges precisely at the phase transition on both sides. We discuss the differences that result from placing a metric on the space of theories vs. states, using the example of coherent free fermion states. We compare the latter to the metric on the space of coherent free boson states and show that in both cases the metric is determined by the symmetries of the corresponding density matrix. We also clarify some misconceptions in the literature pertaining to different notions of flatness associated to metric and non-metric connections, with implications for how one interprets the curvature of the geometry. Our results indicate that in general, caution is needed when connecting the AdS geometry arising from certain models with the AdS/CFT correspondence, and seek to provide a useful collection of guidelines for future progress in this exciting area.https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.8.5.073
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna Erdmenger, Kevin T. Grosvenor, Ro Jefferson
spellingShingle Johanna Erdmenger, Kevin T. Grosvenor, Ro Jefferson
Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
SciPost Physics
author_facet Johanna Erdmenger, Kevin T. Grosvenor, Ro Jefferson
author_sort Johanna Erdmenger, Kevin T. Grosvenor, Ro Jefferson
title Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
title_short Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
title_full Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
title_fullStr Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
title_full_unstemmed Information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
title_sort information geometry in quantum field theory: lessons from simple examples
publisher SciPost
series SciPost Physics
issn 2542-4653
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Motivated by the increasing connections between information theory and high-energy physics, particularly in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence, we explore the information geometry associated to a variety of simple systems. By studying their Fisher metrics, we derive some general lessons that may have important implications for the application of information geometry in holography. We begin by demonstrating that the symmetries of the physical theory under study play a strong role in the resulting geometry, and that the appearance of an AdS metric is a relatively general feature. We then investigate what information the Fisher metric retains about the physics of the underlying theory by studying the geometry for both the classical 2d Ising model and the corresponding 1d free fermion theory, and find that the curvature diverges precisely at the phase transition on both sides. We discuss the differences that result from placing a metric on the space of theories vs. states, using the example of coherent free fermion states. We compare the latter to the metric on the space of coherent free boson states and show that in both cases the metric is determined by the symmetries of the corresponding density matrix. We also clarify some misconceptions in the literature pertaining to different notions of flatness associated to metric and non-metric connections, with implications for how one interprets the curvature of the geometry. Our results indicate that in general, caution is needed when connecting the AdS geometry arising from certain models with the AdS/CFT correspondence, and seek to provide a useful collection of guidelines for future progress in this exciting area.
url https://scipost.org/SciPostPhys.8.5.073
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