The Ryu–Takayanagi conjecture is a conjecture within holography that posits a quantitative relationship between the entanglement entropy of a conformal field theory and the geometry of an associated anti-de Sitter spacetime.[1] The formula characterizes "holographic screens" in the bulk; that is, it specifies which regions of the bulk geometry are "responsible to particular information in the dual CFT". The conjecture is named after Shinsei Ryu and Tadashi Takayanagi, who jointly published the result in 2006.[2] As a result, the authors were awarded the 2015 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics for "fundamental ideas about entropy in quantum field theory and quantum gravity",[3] and awarded the 2024 Dirac Medal of the ICTP for "their insights on quantum entropy in quantum gravity and quantum field theories".[4] The formula was generalized to a covariant form in 2007.[5]
The thermodynamics of black holes suggests certain relationships between the entropy of black holes and their geometry. Specifically, the Bekenstein–Hawking area formula conjectures that the entropy of a black hole is proportional to its surface area:
SBH=
kBA | ||||||
|
The Bekenstein–Hawking entropy
SBH
The Bekenstein–Hawking entropy is a statement about the gravitational entropy of a system; however, there is another type of entropy that is important in quantum information theory, namely the entanglement (or von Neumann) entropy. This form of entropy provides a measure of how far from a pure state a given quantum state is, or, equivalently, how entangled it is. The entanglement entropy is a useful concept in many areas, such as in condensed matter physics and quantum many-body systems. Given its use, and its suggestive similarity to the Bekenstein–Hawking entropy, it is desirable to have a holographic description of entanglement entropy in terms of gravity.
See main article: Holographic principle.
The holographic principle states that gravitational theories in a given dimension are dual to a gauge theory in one lower dimension. The AdS/CFT correspondence is one example of such duality. Here, the field theory is defined on a fixed background and is equivalent to a quantum gravitational theory whose different states each correspond to a possible spacetime geometry. The conformal field theory is often viewed as living on the boundary of the higher dimensional space whose gravitational theory it defines. The result of such a duality is a dictionary between the two equivalent descriptions. For example, in a CFT defined on
d
d
d+1
The Bekenstein–Hawking area law, while claiming that the area of the black hole horizon is proportional to the black hole's entropy, fails to provide a sufficient microscopic description of how this entropy arises. The holographic principle provides such a description by relating the black hole system to a quantum system which does admit such a microscopic description. In this case, the CFT has discrete eigenstates and the thermal state is the canonical ensemble of these states.[6] The entropy of this ensemble can be calculated through normal means, and yields the same result as predicted by the area law. This turns out to be a special case of the Ryu–Takayanagi conjecture.
Consider a spatial slice
\Sigma
where
SA
A\subset\partial\Sigma
B
\gammaA
\gammaA
A
\gammaA
\gammaA
\gammaA
Because of property (3), this surface is typically called the minimal surface when the context is clear. Furthermore, property (1) ensures that the formula preserves certain features of entanglement entropy, such as
SA=SB
S | |
A1+A2 |
\geq
S | |
A1\cupA2 |
In their original paper, Ryu and Takayanagi show this result explicitly for an example in
AdS3/CFT2
AdS3
R
Furthermore,
AdS3
ds2=R2(-\cosh{\rho2dt2}+d\rho2+\sinh{\rho2d\theta2})
in
(t,\rho,\theta)
\rho\toinfty
\rho
\rho\leq\rho0
\rho
L
a
\rho0 | |
e |
\simL/a
In this case, the boundary CFT lives at coordinates
(t,\rho0,\theta)=(t,\theta)
t
\theta\in[0,2\pil/L]
l
A
\theta=0
\theta=2\pil/L
If it is assumed that
\rho0 | |
e |
>>1
This agrees with the result calculated by usual means.[7]