1. Introduction
Two potentially revolutionary ideas have inspired much work in contemporary theoretical physics. Both ideas herald from the use of the general information theoretic approach to the problem of quantum gravity. The first idea is that—the world is holographic—with the physics of several semi-classical systems (by which we mean systems in which matter is treated quantum-mechanically while spacetime and geometry are treated classically) entirely captured on spacetime regions of one dimension lower.
The evidence for holography is already suggestive when considering classical gravitational systems like black holes, or more general causal horizons, and the semi-classical physics of quantum fields in their vicinity. This evidence is strengthened by numerous results in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence [
1,
2], where, in particular, holography as found in semi-classical gravitational systems is put in correspondence with general properties of non-gravitational, purely quantum mechanic
dual many-body systems. Indeed, holographic features deeply characterise condensed matter physics—hence the suggestion that there may be a
purely quantum mechanic origin of holography that may in fact underlie classical, gravitational, geometric physics as studied in the general relativistic context.
The second idea is that geometry itself originates from entanglement. The recent quantum information-theoretic paradigm for gravity has provided a new vision of the cosmos wherein the universe, together with its topology, its geometry and its macroscopic dynamics, arise from the entanglement between the fundamental constituents of some exotic underlying quantum system.
In this direction, in particular, along with the increasing impact of condensed matter physics in string theory and gauge/gravity duality, people have started exploring the use of tensor network (TN) algorithms [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12] from condensed matter theory in quantum gravity [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20], providing interesting insights on holographic duality and its generalisation in terms of geometry/entanglement correspondence [
21,
22]. Approaches like the AdS/MERA [
10,
23], where the geometry of the auxiliary tensor network decomposition of the quantum many-body vacuum state is interpreted as a representation of the dual spatial geometry, are providing an intriguing constructive framework for investigating holography beyond AdS/CFT [
13,
14,
15,
16,
24].
However, if everything is quantum at its root, and this is true not only for ordinary systems living in spacetime but for space, time and geometry themselves, then this implies that the very holographic behaviour of the universe is the result of purely quantum properties of the microscopic constituents of spacetime. In addition, this line of research, therefore, indicates a strong need for a quantum foundation of holography.
In fact, background independence naturally leads to a quantum description of the universe in terms of fundamental quantum many-body physics of discrete and purely algebraic microscopic constituents [
25,
26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
32,
33,
34], from which spacetime emerges only at an effective, approximate level, out of a texture of quantum correlations [
35,
36,
37,
38,
39,
40,
41,
42,
43]. This means that the two suggestions that holography has a purely quantum origin and that geometry itself comes from entanglement are extremely natural when seen from the perspective of quantum gravity formalisms, in which spacetime and geometry are ultimately emergent notions. However, more than that, differently from the semiclassical framework, in the non-perturbative scheme, holography as detected in gravitational systems, as well as any macroscopic feature of our geometric universe, not only would result from purely quantum properties of the microscopic constituents of spacetime, but they can—
only—be understood in this light.
This perspective is manifest in the
Group Field Theory (GFT) formalism, a promising convergence of the insights and results from matrix models [
44,
45], loop quantum gravity and simplicial approaches into a background independent quantum field theory setup. The GFT approach to quantum gravity [
30,
46,
47,
48,
49] provides a very general quantum many-body formulation of the spacetime micro-structure, for instance of the spin networks and discrete quantum geometry states of Loop Quantum Gravity [
25,
26,
27,
29], with a Fock space description where the quantum GFT fields create and annihilate elementary building blocks of space, interpreted as
-simplices in
d spacetime dimensions, organised in nontrivial combinatorial tensor network structures.
As a higher order generalisation of matrix models, the GFT formalism at the same time provides a field-theoretic and inherently covariant framework for generalising the tensor networks approach to the holographic aspects of quantum many-body systems in condensed matter and in the AdS/CFT context. This makes GFT a very effective framework to investigate how space-time geometry, together with its holographic behaviour and macroscopic dynamics, arise from entanglement between the fundamental constituents.
In this paper, we review a series of recent results [
18,
19,
20] concerning the definition of entanglement entropy in the GFT framework and the characterisation of its holographic behaviour. In particular, we focus on the definition of the notion of entanglement entropy in the second quantised formalism of GFT setting and on the set of choices which eventually lead to a holographic behaviour for the entanglement entropy.
The manuscript is organised as follows:
Section 2 shortly reviews the framework of group field theory while focussing the attention of the reader on those aspects of the GFT fields that play a major role in the forthcoming derivation.
Section 3 introduces the second quantisation formalism for group field theory, defines the notion of multi-particle state observable for quantum geometry in the GFT Fock space and specifies a class of GFT coherent state basis, necessary for the definition of the entanglement entropy expectation value. In
Section 4, the statistical derivation of the Rényi entropy for a bipartite GFT open spin network state is reviewed, with an emphasis on the Fock space setting. The formal mapping of the expectation values of the Rényi entropy to BF theory amplitudes is described and the resulting divergence degree and scaling of the entropy analysed.
Section 5 briefly comments on the results on the holographic scaling for the interacting GFT case. A brief discussion and an appendix on the notion of coherent states over-completeness close the manuscript.
2. Group Field Theory
Group field theories (GFT) are quantum field theories defined on
d copies of a compact Lie group
G with combinatorially non-local interactions. The dynamics of the GFT field
are specified by a probability measure
comprised of a
Gaussian measure , associated with a positive covariance kernel operator
C defining the propagator of the theory [
45],
1 and a
perturbation around it, given by an interaction term
, generically parametrized as
where
denotes a term in the set of elementary interactions,
is the specific monomial in the fields associated with the interaction, and
is the respective coupling constant. Together with the field valence
d and symmetry, the specific choice of the covariance and interaction kernels identifies the GFT model.
We are particularly concerned with three peculiar aspects of the GFT formalism, which will combine at the hearth of the following derivation. The first is that the dynamical
d-valent GFT field
combinatorially behaves as an infinite dimensional rank-
d tensor, with indices labelled by elements of the compact Lie group
G [
18]. This is apparent in the combinatorially non-local structure of the interaction kernels
, as functions on
for finite sets of interactions. The kernels
do not impose coincidence of points in the group space
, but the whole set of the
field arguments is partitioned into pairs, convoluted “strandwise” by the kernel,
Indeed, one can see GFTs as higher-rank, infinite dimensional generalizations of random matrix models [
45]. For instance, if we take
G as
, then group fields identically reduce to rank-
d tensors,
2 where integrability with respect to the discrete Dirac measure
is satisfied for all fields considered.
The second aspect is that specific GFT partition functions, where the group
G is identified with the local gauge subgroup of gravity and the kernels properly chosen, define generating functions for the covariant quantization of Loop Quantum Gravity (LQG) in terms of spin foam models (for instance, [
28]). In particular, LQG spin network states, describing three-dimensional discrete quantum geometries at the boundary of the spin foam transition amplitudes, can be expressed as expectation values of specific GFT operators. In a formalism of second quantisation for the GFT, spin network boundary states then become elements of the GFT Fock space and spin network vertices, intended as atoms of space that can be put in direct correspondence with fundamental GFT quanta that are created or annihilated by the field operators of GFT.
When
G is set to correspond to the local gauge group of GR, e.g., the Lorentz group
or its universal covering, or
in dimension
, the gauge symmetry leads to an invariance of the GFT action under the (right) diagonal action of
G. GFT fields are constrained to satisfy a
gauge invariance condition, defined as a global symmetry of the GFT field under simultaneous translation of its group variables:
The gauge invariance condition, or
closure constraint, is the main dynamical ingredient of GFT models for quantum BF theory in arbitrary dimension. In
,
BF theory can be interpreted as a theory of Euclidean gravity, and therefore
GFT with closure constraint provides a natural arena in which to formulate 3D Euclidean quantum gravity models. A typical example is the Boulatov model [
50] (which generates Ponzano–Regge spin foam amplitudes [
51]), which will constitute an important ingredient of the following derivation.
The third aspect is that, for such (simplicial) GFT models, endowed with a geometric interpretation of the dynamical fields, the very field-theoretic nature of the GFT formalism provides a powerful tool to describe quantum geometry states as a peculiar quantum many-body systems in the formalism of second quantisation. For large systems in quantum mechanics, we know that the concept of a particle fades away and is replaced by the notion of an excitation of a given mode of the field representing the particle. Similarly, in the GFT description, we expect the solid graph description of spin networks quantum geometry to fade into a dynamical net of excitations of the GFT field over a vacuum. Given the tensorial behaviour of the GFT field, such a quantum many-body description turns quantum geometry states into collective, purely combinatorial and algebraic analogues of quantum tensor networks states.
These three ingredients together make the GFT second quantised formalism an specially convenient setting to quantitatively investigate the relation between geometry and entanglement in quantum gravity, taking advantage of the most recent techniques and tools of quantum statistical mechanics, information theory and condensed matter theory. In particular, quantum tensor network algorithms provide a constructive tool to investigate the roots of the holographic behaviour of gravity at the quantum level.
3. The GFT Fock Space
In a second quantisation scheme [
30], multi-particle states of the quantum GFT field
can be organised in a Fock space
generated by a Fock vacuum
and field operators
assumed to be invariant under the diagonal action of the group
, for
, consistently with (
3), and to obey canonical commutation relations (bosonic statistics)
In these terms, the Fock vacuum is the state with no quantum geometrical or matter degrees of freedom, satisfying
for all arguments. A generic single-particle state
with wavefunction
, consisting of a
d-valent node with links labelled by group elements
, is written as
where
is the Haar measure,
is an element of the single-particle Hilbert space
, and
a basis (of Dirac distributions) in
. For
, this is the space of states of a quantum tetrahedron [
52]. Notice then that one can think of (
6) as the analogue of a quantum tensor state where each group element
g corresponds to an index
i variable in a continuous (∞-dim) index space
.
3The complete Fock space is given by the direct sum of
n-particle sectors
, restricted to states that are invariant under graph automorphisms of vertex relabelling in the spin network picture, in order to consider multi-particle states that only depend on the intrinsic combinatorial structure of their interaction pattern (a discrete counterpart of continuum diffeomorphisms). Therefore, one has
The symmetry condition is consistent with the assumed
bosonic statistics and it implies
indistinguishability for the quanta of the quantum many-body system.
Generic GFT observables
in the Fock space are defined in terms of a series of many-body operators expressed as a function of the field operators (or of the basic creation/annihilation operators). For instance, a
-body operator
acting on
vertices and resulting in
particles is written as [
30]
where
denote the matrix elements of a corresponding first-quantized operator.
3.1. Multi-Particle State Observables
Analogous with the case of the single particle state in (
6), we can think of a quantum many-body system as a collective state generated by the action of a
multi-particle group-field operator on the Fock vacuum. We can define a
product n-particle state, comprising
n disconnected nodes, by the multiple action of the creation field operator in the group representation of the Fock space, e.g.,
Because the
commute with each other, the order of the particles does not affect the state and we have
. The
n-particle state
defines a multi-particle basis of the Fock space
, with orthogonality relation given by
In addition, because of the required symmetry of the fields
,
, the
n-particle state is right invariant
Finally, the resolution of identity in the Fock space can be written in terms of the
n-particle state as
One can check immediately that
.
A generic GFT
multi-particle state, analogous to (
6), will then be based on a specific configuration of
n fields, characterized by a multi-particle wavefunction
, generated by a multi-particle operator in the GFT Fock space
via the repeated action of the GFT field operators on the Fock space.
We are interested in the structure of quantum correlations of the multi-particle state
. As it is the case for any highly entangled quantum many-body system, disentangling the information on the quantum correlations of
is highly nontrivial. Therefore, we focus on a special class of multi-particle operators
, where the wave-function is explicitly constructed via a pairwise contractions scheme of single node states, in correspondence with a given
network architecture . We write
with
operators generating the nodes connected by link kernels
to form an open network with
dangling indices, via an overall integration over
. The expression of the link convolution kernel connecting the nodes pairwise is left generic at this stage, with the only requirement to preserve the overall gauge invariance of the network state.
We shall see such a class of multi-particle operators as tensor networks operators, where we reduce the entanglement structure of the multi-particle state to local correlations induced by the generic link kernels L, propagated non-locally via nodes.
Notice that the most generic tensor network state of the theory would involve superpositions of both network architectures (combinatorial structures) and number of particles corresponding to the same number of boundary degrees of freedom,
where, for simplicity, we indicate by
the set of pairwise link convolutions (gluing) functions associated with a given graph
, and some suitable symmetry quotient factor removing equivalent graph configurations is assumed.
3.2. GFT Coherent State Basis
In the context of quantum gravity, we specify the GFT formalism to the case
, the relevant local gauge subgroup of gravity, and we understand the group elements
g as a generalisation of the embedded parallel transports (holonomies) of the gravitational
G-connection of loop quantum gravity. The symmetric GFT
d-valent fields as
d-simplices (convex polyhedra, e.g., for
, these are tetrahedra), with
d number of faces labelled by dual Lie algebra-valued flux variables, become single “quanta” of twisted geometry states expressed in terms of quantum spin network basis [
29].
In this setting, on the one hand, we are interested in working with states in the Fock space that can be eventually put in relation with extended macroscopic 3D geometries. To this aim, the natural choice consists of looking for a coherent state basis in
, defined by exponential operators providing desirable coherence properties, having
macroscopic occupation numbers for given modes controlled by the wave-function [
53,
54,
55,
56]. More concretely, this choice will allow us to compute quantum averages of many-body systems in thermal equilibrium using functional integrals over group field configurations [
18,
19,
20].
The simplest class of such states is given by the single-particle (condensate) coherent states
For the last equality, we use the definition of the
n-particle state (11).
is the field on
that has the same gauge symmetry as
, namely
, and
is the normalization
4
One can show that
is the eigenstate of the field operator
such tha
Indeed, we have
In the first equality, we use the commutator (
5) between
and
. In the last equality, we use the fact that
is right invariant. Thus, when
acts on
, it gives (23). In particular, coherent states
provide an over-complete basis of the Fock space
(see
Appendix A for details).
Via Equation (23), one immediately obtains the tensor fields
and
in terms of expectation values of
and
with respect to
Accordingly, we can express the multi-particle state as the expectation value of a group-field network operator (16) in the 2nd quantised basis of eigenstates of the GFT quantum field operator.
For the network operator
defined in Equation (16), we get
This is a group field tensor network state based on graph
with
n nodes and
L links. In particular, for
, we can think of the expectation values of the associated operators as peculiar projected entangled-pairs tensor network states (PEPS)
obtained by the contraction of maximally entangled link states
via tensor states
on some generically open graph architecture
.
The basis
labels the uncontracted dangling indices comprising the boundary of the auxiliary tensor network representation. Differently from standard PEPS, the GFT networks are further characterised by the inherently
random character of the tensors
, induced by their field-theoretic statistical descritpion. In this light, in particular, we can see states like (29) as a generalisation of the random tensor network states (RTNs) recently introduced in [
15], where the statistical characterisation of the standard RTN gets mapped in the momenta of the GFT partition function.
5 4. Bipartite Entanglement of a GFT Network State
Given a group field tensor network state
, a bipartition of the boundary degrees of freedom corresponds to a factorisation of the boundary Hilbert space
into two subspaces
and
, such that
The entanglement of the boundary state
across the bipartition in
and
is measured by the von Neumann entropy
where
defines the (normalised) marginal on
of the GFT multi-particle density matrix,
A representation of
for the case of a simple 2-vertices graph is given in
Figure 1.
It is computationally convenient to derive the von Neumann entropy as the limit of the Rényi entropy
, via standard replica trick. The Rényi entropy is defined as
where
is the 1-cycle permutation operator in
acting on the reduced Hilbert space
,
and
d is the dimension of the Hilbert space in the same region
A (see
Figure 1). Explicitly, one has
with
and
.
The Rényi entropy
coincides with the von Neumann entropy
as
N goes to 1, which is
We are interested in carrying on this measurement directly in the Fock space of GFT.
4.1. Expected Rènyi Entropy in the Fock Space
Due to the random character of the nodes , induced by their dynamical GFT description, the measure of the entanglement will be necessarily given in expectation value.
Now, by construction, the Rényi entropy
is a functional of the GFT fields
and
, hence it can be promoted to an observable
in the GFT Fock space. We shall then derive the expectation value of the Rényi entropy in the Fock space using single-particle coherent state basis, by inserting the resolution of identity
(and set
, see
Appendix A), with a normal ordering
such that all
is to the left of
:
6
where the very GFT action
is constructed as a quantum many-body operator on the Fock space. By (36), the explicit form of the expectation value reads
If we choose to work in perturbative GFT regime, such that
, with
, then we deal with a polynomially perturbed generalised [
45] Gaussian distribution for the random field, hence we can take advantage of the central limit theorem to get a good approximation of (42) in terms of a Taylor expansion around the mean values
plus corrections due to fluctuations around the mean values that are suppressed whenever the dimensionality of our quantum system gets extremely large. For standard random tensor network states [
15], such a
typical regime is realised in the
large bond limit, when the dimension of the random tensor index (bond) space
is extremely large,
.
In the GFT setting, one has to deal with infinite dimensional bond spaces,
, which automatically set the derivation in the typicality regime of [
15]. Nevertheless, link spaces are regularised via a cut-off on the group representation space, such that
with
equal to
if
and 0, otherwise. Therefore, with
, the dimension of the bonds (links) of the network, one can consistently assume typicality to hold in the
regime.
Given (43), the expression of the
N-th Rényi entropy is mapped into a ratio of averaged partition functions,
where we removed the bars over
to simplify the notation.
Let us rewrite
as a trace contraction of individual link and nodes density matrices, similarly to (35). We restrict for simplicity to tensor network observables (16) with
n vertices and
L links, and with
where now the
label coincides with the
v-label of the nodes of the graph
. The
replica of the density matrix operator describing a graph observable reads
The linearity of the trace allows for moving the expectation operator inside the integral and letting it act on the N replicas of the products of fields. We then write (45) as
and we focus on the calculation of
.
The derivation in [
15,
18] thereby proceeds by making two strongly simplifying assumptions. The first consists of the restriction to the case of a Gaussian (free) group field theory for describing the single node field statistics. The second assumes the expected value
of the field operator at each node to be individually independently distributed (i.i.d.). The latter assumption corresponds, from a physical viewpoint, to considering a non-interacting quantum many body system. The latter condition translates in particular into a
local averaging condition, namely
which allows for an explicit calculation of the expectation value in terms of a product of
n -point function of the free group field theory
In the free case, in particular, one can evaluate the
-point functions at each node directly via Wick’s theorem
where the permutation operator acts strandwise (locally on the link spaces)
with
independent from
,
a labelling the replica order at each node,
denoting the set of
,
.
When
for all
a from 1 to
N,
where
and
are the representations of
on
and
, respectively.
The averaged partition functions,
and
become
respectively corresponding to summations of Feynman graphs
and
labelled by permutation operators
, at each node
v, contracted with the
densities at each link
ℓ (see
Figure 2). The difference between the reduced and full (density matrix) networks is encoded in the boundary condition, as
is defined with
on
A of
and
on
B of
, while
is defined with
for all boundary region
.
It is easy to see at this stage what the impact of the i.i.d. assumption is in reducing the complexity of the propagator.
7 In this case, the permutation operator
acts only among the N replicas of the same node, independently taken across the graph. Clearly,
as the permutation group
is much smaller that
, reducing to
the number of permutation patterns with respect to the
allowed patterns of the indistinguishable case. Such a strong truncation is nevertheless consistent with a restriction to the tree-like, or “melonic”, sector of the Feynmann diagrams of the
-point function, which we expect to provide the leading order contribution to the divergence degree.
From a qualitative point of view, a truly general result in GFT would require to consider a fully interacting GFT and to drop the i.i.d. assumption. Moreover, it would require to leave the tensor network representation of the GFT multi-particle operator, and derive the entropy for the generic operator given in (15).
4.2. Mapping to BF Theory Partition Function
The partition functions
and
correspond to summations of two
auxiliary networks
and
. We shall proceed by giving the main ingredients of the derivation, while referring the reader to the original literature (see e.g., [
18]) for a fully detailed description of the combinatorics of the calculation.
First of all, in opening the expressions for
and
, we shall notice that the action of
at each node is decoupled among the incident legs. Due to the strandwise action of the propagator, the value of the networks
and
can be written as factorised products over internal (e.g., trivial propagators acting in the picture below) and boundary links
On the internal (dotted) links,
can be written as a trace of a modified representation of a permutation group element
, such that
where
In particular, any element
can be expressed as the product of disjoint cycles
leading to a specific simple form for the individual link contributions
which is expressed as the product of the traces of the individual cycles
. Indeed, one can eventually realise [
18,
20] that the integral of the pattern networks
on the gauge holonomies are equivalent to the amplitudes of a three-dimensional topological BF field theory [
50], with given boundary condition. Such amplitudes are discretized on a specific 2-complex comprised by the
N replicas of the networks, with each different pattern
corresponding to a different 2-complex. The simple form of the various functions entering the calculation of the entropy directly follows from the specific approximations used in the calculation of expectation values, namely the choice to neglect the GFT interactions and to consider tensor-network like observables with simple delta functions associated with the links’ kernels.
In the local averaging setting, the expectation values of the partition functions therefore reduce to contractions of single node
-point functions of the GFT model, expanded in series of Feynman amplitudes and corresponding to a local BF gravity spin-foams (see
Figure 3). In particular, if one specifies to a 3-valent GFT field theory, with simplicial four-field interaction kernels, each domain amplitude will correspond to a Boulatov (or 3-
d BF theory) spinfoam amplitude, whose semi-classical limit coincides with Ponzano–Regge gravity [
50].
4.3. Entanglement Scaling and Divergence Degree
Given the expression for the Rényi entropy,
, finding the scaling of the entanglement entropy amounts to identifying the most divergent terms of the partition functions
and
, which corresponds to the divergence degree of the BF theory amplitudes discretized on a lattice [
58,
59,
60,
61,
62]. The recipe given in [
18] consists of a combination of coarse graining and combinatorics.
Once given global boundary conditions for
,
and
, one can coarse-grain the boundary of
into a single node with
and
. Accordingly, the boundary of
gets coarse-grained into two nodes, one of which corresponds to
A with
,
and the other to
B with
and
. The corresponding closed graphs are denoted as
and
. Once we take the expectation value on the
N replicas at each node, then a given pattern
divides
and
into regions (set of nodes), each one coloured with permutation group
and
N integrals over
(see
Figure 4 below).
In full analogy with the
Ising model [
15], links connecting different regions identify boundaries which can be interpreted as domain walls. We are interested in finding the scaling behaviour of the Rényi entropy in the large bond regime
, classically corresponding to the long-range ordered phase for such an Ising-like model, where the entropy of a boundary region is known to be directly related to the energy of the domain wall between domains of the order parameter [
15].
Different local regions
R, with uniform boundary conditions, can be further coarse-grained via gauge invariance to single block nodes. For a given region, the degree of divergence is counted by the number of links in the region, minus the number of trivialised links on a maximal spanning tree
One can then generally show that the pattern with no domain walls,
, corresponding to the ordered phase in which all nodes are assigned with the same permutation group, has the highest degree of divergence
where
is the number of links in the
graph.
For the bipartite graph
, defined by the assignment of different boundary conditions for
A and
B, patterns with a single domain wall have higher divergence degree than the multi-domain walls configurations. The coarse-grained graph contains only two block nodes and one finds [
18]
The leading order divergence terms of the amplitudes are given by
and the
Nth order Rényi entropy
eventually reads
When
N goes to 1, the leading term of the entanglement entropy
is given by
where
with
reads as a regularisation of each BF bubble divergence
.
The result, within a different formal setting, reproduces the universal behaviour typical of random tensor network states [
15]. However, differently from the case of a standard random tensor network, the considered GFT states carry an inherent geometric characterisation. The graph
is dual to a 2D simplicial complex. Each node is dual to a triangle and each link is dual to an edge of this complex, and the specific GFT model endows the simplicial complex with dynamical geometric data. In particular, the proportionality of the entropy to the cardinality of the minimal domain wall
has a clear geometric interpretation, which becomes apparent in passing from a group element to a spin representation description of the dynamical fields, in the sense of discrete geometry. In this case, indeed, we have
where the length of each edge
, in any given eigenstate of the length operator [
26], is a function of the irreducible representation
associated with it, and to the dual link. Therefore, the cardinality of the minimal global domain wall can be interpreted as the
-area (length) of a dual discrete minimal one-dimensional path and we can write
. [
20].
Equation (68) can then be understood as the discrete tensor network analogue of the Ryu–Takayanagi formula in the context of group field theory [
21], if we consider the path integral averaging over the open network
as a simplified model of a bulk/boundary (spinfoam/network state) duality [
18].
5. Holographic Scaling for Interacting with GFT
A complete geometric characterisation of the result requires working with a fully interacting GFT model. Indeed, it is the simplicial character of the interaction kernels that actually provides a connection between GFT and quantum gravity spin-foams. In this sense, both consistency and robustness of the result in (68) require exploring the possible modifications to the RT formula induced by group field interactions.
At the perturbative level, this amounts to calculating the first order correction of
in the GFT coupling constant
, namely
and
, with
This is a combinatorially highly non-trivial problem, as the interaction processes correspond to further stranded diagrams that contribute to the expectation value of
(see
Figure 5). The behaviour of the amplitudes for rank-3 fields and Boulatov (simplicial) four fields interaction kernel
is studied in [
20]. Therein, the authors provide a series of theorems aimed at constraining the complexity of the combinatorial pattern. In particular, it was shown that patterns with a single interaction happening between two incoming and two outgoing fields of the same network node
v leads at most to the same number of divergences as in a maximal case of the free theory, where the interaction at
v is replaced by a free propagation [
20].
Interestingly, the situation changes if one drops the assumption of gauge invariance (closure) for the GFT field. In this case, the expected
Nth Rényi entanglement entropy is estimated to be
The linear order corrections do modify the asymptotical scaling of the Rènyi entanglement entropy with the area of a minimal surface. In particular, the results in [
20] show that the proportionality factor is corrected by an additive term linear in the perturbed group field theory coupling constant
. However, no additive leading order correction to the area scaling entropy formula emerges from the analysis. A more systematic analysis of such dynamical regularisation and its relation with the emergence of an effective gravitational coupling is an open interesting issue for future work.
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Group field theories realise a kinematical description of quantum space geometry in terms of discrete, pre-geometric degrees of freedom of combinatorial and algebraic nature, described in terms of spin-network states. In loop quantum gravity (LQG), such theories play the role of
auxiliary field theories, whose partition functions, for appropriate choices of the kernels, provide generating functionals for the LQG spinfoams: a covariant path integral realisation of spacetime as a transition amplitude between boundary spin network states. More generally, GFTs provide a versatile field-theoretic tool to study the very emergence of space-time quantum geometry via path integral techniques and a quantum many-body approach associated with their second quantised formalism [
57,
63]. Moreover, as higher order generalisations of matrix models, group field theories can be put in direct formal relation with tensor network algorithms [
10,
11,
12,
17,
18] in condensed matter theory.
In this review, we considered a setting
similar to that of a gauge field theory on a lattice, which in the background independent quantum gravity context consists of nets of fundamental quanta of space that admit an interpretation as quantized fuzzy geometries.
The entanglement structure of the wave-function for such collections of quanta is encoded into a ∞-rank tensor of coefficients, which we interpret here as an
open GFT network state. In [
18,
19,
20], such an open GFT spin network is interpreted as a
tensor network representation of some quantum geometry wave-function, with physical indices corresponding to boundary degrees of freedom of the “auxiliary” GFT network state, realised by a spin network.
In this setting, the degree of entanglement of a generic quantum region of space can be measured holographically, in terms of the entanglement entropy of the bipartite auxiliary spin network. Such entanglement is directly related to the topology of the internal network, which, differently from many similar derivations in quantum gravity, is only partially fixed by the choice of the auxiliary network architecture. Indeed, due to the random character of the nodes, expectation values imply a dynamical characterisation of the internal graph topology, which end up being directly specified by the choice of the GFT model. Therefore, different GFT models a priori induce different architecture for the internal network, with higher order interactions corresponding to a higher degree of connectivity of the graph.
The GFT formalism, along the lines first proposed by [
15], allows for an explicit computation of the entanglement entropy, which in [
18,
19,
20] is realised within a set of simplifying assumptions:
indistinguishability and
i.i.d.: the symmetry of the group field naturally selects a bosonic quantum many-body characterisation for the quanta comprising our network states. This translates into indistinguishability for the nodes comprising the network. Furthermore, along with the results in [
15], in the statistical evaluation of the averaged Rényi entropy, ‘tensor’ fields at the nodes are individually independently distributed. This leads to a sensible simplification of the auxiliary bulk averages, reduced to a set of
local amplitudes defined among conjugate domains of replicas of the fields at each node. Such i.i.d. assumption is a natural choice in [
15], where random tensor networks are associated with maximally mixed states. In our setting, accordingly, the
i.i.d. assumption presupposes actual
absence of dynamical interaction among the quanta sitting at the nodes of the graph. Effectively, quanta couples through the network only via local adjacent link entanglement. Such a non-interacting quantum many-body assumption is very strong. Nevertheless, it is consistent with the simplifying choice of dealing with
product coherent states in the adopted 2nd quantised formalism. On the other hand, the i.i.d. assumption embodies some a priori knowledge of the position of the individual nodes (their replicas and conjugates) on the graph, hence somehow violating indistinguishability.
maximally entangled bonds: the class of GFT tensor networks considered is further radically characterised by link states given by maximally entangled pair states, associated with gluing kernels realised in terms of bivalent intertwiners with
coefficients. In principle, the choice of the link state can be generalised to a more general kernel, while still being expressed in terms of the mutual information among the half link states [
14].
propagator holonomies are set to
for all link
: this assumption makes the state
lying in the flat vacuum state recently considered in the context of Loop Quantum Gravity [
64].
finite link space (bond) dimension
D: while taking a large leg space dimension
limit, we always deal with a finite-dimensional restriction of the leg spaces
, obtained through the introduction of a sharp cut-off
in the group representation, such that
, for
. More radically, one could regularise the divergences via “box” normalization of
by using quantum groups. Interestingly, such a quantum deformation can be related to the cosmological constant
in the semi-classical regime of the spinfoam formalism (see e.g., [
65,
66]).
tensor network setting: we work with regular networks of 3-valent nodes. The GFT interaction kernels adopted correspond to the ones defining the Boulatov model for 3D gravity. The coupling of the interaction term is always assumed to be much smaller than 1, allowing for a perturbative expansion of the expectation value of the Rényi entropy in .
As a result, the set of assumptions above induces a structure of correlations that is essentially local in its
leading contribution to the entropy, even when the interaction among fields at different nodes is considered [
18,
20]. This suggests that the emergence of the dominant holographic behaviour for the entropy is intertwined with the universality features of the large bond regime. In the presence of (weak) interactions, such area scaling behaviour is shown to remain a solid feature of the
quantum typical regime [
20].
8Many aspects can be tuned to further test such a holographic behaviour in the specific aproach. At the level of the free theory, it would be interesting to look at changes in the area scaling due to minimal modification of the very free propagator, via more general heat-kernel techniques, possibly expressed in terms of a different choice of mutual information among the half link states [
14]. For higher order perturbations, where the diagrams are dominated by the bulk structure, induced by the creation of new interaction vertices [
20], we may expect significant changes in the area scaling behaviour, even if the local averaging scheme induced by the i.i.d. assumption is preserved. Outside the typicality regime, it is natural to expect that fluctuations in the annealed average (43) become more and more relevant and the area scaling behaviour is eventually lost. A detailed study in this sense requires strong computational efforts, necessary to explore the properties and combinatorics of the dynamically induced bulk auxiliary networks.
More generally, concerning the potential of the GFT formalism in the study of holographic entanglement in quantum geometry, much still remain to be understood. We showed how the formalism of second quantization for GFT, and the use of a coherent state basis, allow for a new approach to the study of entanglement in quantum geometry. Standard quantum mechanical correlations among links and nodes of the quantum many-body network state are replaced by correlations among excitations of modes of the tensor field representing the particle. This is likely the right formalism for understanding the diverse roles played by entanglement in quantum gravity, from the local entanglement among single quanta responsible for the connectivity of a quantum geometry configuration, to the local and non-local entanglement among modes of the GFT field, intended as elementary excitations induced by the collective behaviour of the underlying many-body quantum system. This would effectively allow for maximally disregarding the auxiliary spin network structures and work in full indistinguishability with bosonic GFT quanta of geometry in the Fock space.
However, harnessing entanglement in the 2nd quantisation formalism is still a fundamental open problem already in condensed matter and quantum information theory [
68,
69,
70]. In our derivation, the second quantisation scheme was in fact only partially realised. Indistinguishability would have actually prevented us from defining an AB-factorisation of the Hilbert space. In this regard, we proceeded by selecting a single graph Hilbert space within the full Fock space, hence coming back to a first quantisation formalism. Indistinguishability was further violated by the local averaging approach, in
Section 4.1, induced by the i.i.d. assumption. A GFT derivation that makes full use of the mode aspect of second quantization is therefore substantially left for future work. Success in this sense would be evocative of (and consistent with) the general perspective that sees continuum spacetime and geometry as emergent from the collective, quantum many-body description of the fundamental GFT degrees of freedom, the same perspective motivating a large part of the literature and in particular the one concerned with GFT renormalization (both perturbative and non-perturbative) [
71,
72,
73,
74,
75,
76,
77,
78,
79,
80,
81,
82].
Most recent work in this direction focussed on entanglement among GFT modes induced by interaction, starting from a generalization of the Bogoliubov description of a weakly interacting Bose gas to the GFT framework [
83]. Analogous insights on the inherently dynamic character of entanglement among GFT modes in second quantization appear in the series of recent results proposing a general procedure for constructing states that describe macroscopic, spatially homogeneous universes as Bose–Einstein condensates (see e.g., [
53]). Strong results in this sense would provide a new quantitative tool to unravel the relation between entanglement, holography and emergence of spacetime geometry in quantum gravity.
For instance, an interesting direct correspondence between black holes and Bose–Einstein condensates (BECs) of gravitons at the point of maximal packing was recently proposed in [
84], though within a standard
effective field theory framework. In this case, the physics of maximally-packed gravitational systems is identified with the general behaviour of BECs at the critical point of the quantum phase transition, while collective nearly gapless excitations of the quantum condensate are shown to define the holographic degrees of freedom responsible for the known semiclassical holographic properties of black holes (BH) [
84]. In this exemplary case, GFTs would provide a unique
non-perturbative formalism to investigate the foundations of black hole entropy [
85] and holography as a general quantum phenomenon of nature.