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Phys. Rev. A 73, 012309 (2006) [14 pages]

Entanglement-area law for general bosonic harmonic lattice systems

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M. Cramer1, J. Eisert2,3,1, M. B. Plenio2,3, and J. Dreißig1
1Institut für Physik, Universität Potsdam, Am Neuen Palais 10, D-14469 Potsdam, Germany
2QOLS, Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BW, United Kingdom
3Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Imperial College London, Exhibition Road, London, SW7 2BW, United Kingdom

Received 21 June 2005; published 10 January 2006

We demonstrate that the entropy of entanglement and the distillable entanglement of regions with respect to the rest of a general harmonic-lattice system in the ground or a thermal state scale at most as the boundary area of the region. This area law is rigorously proven to hold true in noncritical harmonic-lattice systems of arbitrary spatial dimension, for general finite-ranged harmonic interactions, regions of arbitrary shape, and states of nonzero temperature. For nearest-neighbor interactions—corresponding to the Klein-Gordon case—upper and lower bounds to the degree of entanglement can be stated explicitly for arbitrarily shaped regions, generalizing the findings of Phys. Rev. Lett. 94 060503 (2005). These higher-dimensional analogs of the analysis of block entropies in the one-dimensional case show that under general conditions, one can expect an area law for the entanglement in noncritical harmonic many-body systems. The proofs make use of methods from entanglement theory, as well as of results on matrix functions of block-banded matrices. Disordered systems are also considered. We moreover construct a class of examples for which the two-point correlation length diverges, yet still an area law can be proven to hold. We finally consider the scaling of classical correlations in a classical harmonic system and relate it to a quantum lattice system with a modified interaction. We briefly comment on a general relationship between criticality and area laws for the entropy of entanglement.

© 2006 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.73.012309
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.73.012309
PACS:
03.67.Mn, 05.50.+q, 05.70.−a