Abstract

The thermal equilibrium properties of physical systems can be described using Gibbs states. It is therefore of great interest to know when such states allow for an easy description. In particular, this is the case if correlations between distant regions are small. In this work, we consider 1D quantum spin systems with local, finite-range, translation-invariant interactions at any temperature. In this setting, we show that Gibbs states satisfy uniform exponential decay of correlations and, moreover, the mutual information between two regions decays exponentially with their distance, irrespective of the temperature. In order to prove the latter, we show that exponential decay of correlations of the infinite-chain thermal states, exponential uniform clustering and exponential decay of the mutual information are equivalent for 1D quantum spin systems with local, finite-range interactions at any temperature. In particular, Araki's seminal results yields that the three conditions hold in the translation-invariant case. The methods we use are based on the Belavkin-Staszewski relative entropy and on techniques developed by Araki. Moreover, we find that the Gibbs states of the systems we consider are superexponentially close to saturating the data-processing inequality for the Belavkin-Staszewski relative entropy.

Highlights

  • The thermal equilibrium properties of quantum systems can be described by quantum Gibbs states

  • We show that Gibbs states satisfy uniform exponential decay of correlations and, the mutual information between two regions decays exponentially with their distance, irrespective of the temperature

  • In order to prove the latter, we show that exponential decay of correlations of the infinite-chain thermal states, exponential uniform clustering and exponential decay of the mutual information are equivalent for 1D quantum spin systems with local, finite-range interactions at any temperature

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Summary

Introduction

The thermal equilibrium properties of quantum systems can be described by quantum Gibbs states.

Main results
Mutual information and relative entropy
Quantum spin chains
Locality estimates in 1D
Partial trace
Locality of observables
Approximate factorization of the Gibbs state
Correlations in finite intervals vs the infinite chain
Local indistinguishability and clustering
Decay of mutual information for Gibbs states of local Hamiltonians
Proof of Step 1
Proof of Step 2
Proof of Step 3
Proof of Step 4
Proof of Step 5
Findings
Final remarks and Conclusions
Full Text
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