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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Can entanglement explain black hole entropy? /

Ried, Katja. January 2011 (has links)
Orientador: George Emanuel Avraam Matsas / Banca: Daniel Augusto Turolla Vanzella / Banca: Ernesto Galvão / Resumo: Não disponível / Abstract: When seeking inspiration for a future theory of quantum gravity, studying black holes is a promising ansatz, since they present us with several puzzles at the intersection of quantum theory and gravity. Among these is their entropy: although there are compelling arguments for its existence, its origin and statistical meaning remain a mystery. Previous work showed that at least some aspects of this phenomenon can be accounted for by the entanglement of quantum fields across the horizon: if a field is globally in a pure state, yet part of it is hidden behind the event horizon, then the reduced state of the remainder possesses non-zero entropy. This is the possibility we explore in the present work, in the simplest of settings: a ground-state escalar field, defined in three-dimensional, flat or unifromily curved space, and derive an expression for the entropy, which is evauated numerically. the results show that the entropy scales with the boundary area of the inaccessible region, a key feature of black hole entropy known as the area law. Furthermore. we conclude that the dominant contribution to the entropy is due to short-range interactions, and discuss some physical implications of this insight for the puzzle of black hole entropy / Mestre
2

Aspectos relativísticos da teoria da informação quântica /

Landulfo, André Gustavo Scagliusi. January 2011 (has links)
Orientador: George Emanuel Avraam Matsas / Banca: Alberto Vasquez Saa / Banca: Daniel Augusto Turolla Vanzella / Banca: Nathan Jacob Berkovits / Banca: Carlos Monken / Resumo: Mesmo tratando a gravidade classicamente, a Teoria Quântica de Campos em Espaços Tempos Curvos (TQCEC) faz previsões impressionantes sobre o comportamento de campos quânticos na presença de campos gravitacionais. Entretanto, ao mesmo tempo em que nos revela efeitos surpreendentes, a TQCEC levanta uma série de questionamentos. O desenvolvimento de uma teoria na interface entre a teoria da relatividade, a mecânica quântica e a teoria da informação poderá não só lançar uma nova luz em tais questões como também nos permitir descobrir novos efeitos de gravitação quântica de baixas energias. Entretanto, os efeitos que a teoria da relatividade causa na teoria da informação quântica são não triviais já no espaço-tempo de Minkowski. Faz-se necessáaria portanto uma análise cuidadosa de tais efeitos já no contexto da relatividade especial. Sendo assim, estudamos primeiro o comportamento das desigualdades de Bell usando férmions de spin 1/2 e fótons quando os detetores que medem spin e polarização, respectivamente, movemse com certa velocidade. Além disso, usamos o limite de Holevo para estudar sistemas de comunicação quando as partes que trocam informação tem um movimento relativo. Como um desenvolvimento natural, estudamos diversos aspectos da teoria da informação quântica no contexto da teoria quântica de campos e, em particular, do efeito Unruh. Tais resultados nos permitiram prever o comportamento de qubits nas vizinhanças de um buraco negro de Schwarzschild / Abstract: Although it treats gravity classically, the Quantum Field Theory in Curved Spacetimes (QFTCS) makes remarkable predictions about de behavior of quantum fields in the presence of gravitational fields. However, these striking discoveries raises several issues. The development of a theory at the interface between the theory of relativity, quantum mechanics and information theory could not only shed new light on such questions as well as allow us to uncover new low-energy quantum gravity effects. However, relativity affects quantum information theory in a highly non-trivial way already in Minkowski spacetime. Therefore, a careful analysis of these effects in the context of special relativity is needed. For this purpose, we begin investigating how the movement of the spin and polarization detectors influences the Bell inequalities using spin 1/2 fermions and photons, respectively. Then, we use the Holevo bound to investigate quantum communication channels when the parts that trade information have a relative motion. As a natural development, we use quantum field theory and, in particular, the Unruh effect to analyze several aspects of quantum information theory. This enables us to predict the behavior of qubits in the vicinity of a Schwarzschild black hole / Doutor

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