Probing beyond ETH at large c

A bstract We study probe corrections to the Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis (ETH) in the context of 2D CFTs with large central charge and a sparse spectrum of low dimension operators. In particular, we focus on observables in the form of non-local composite operators O o b s x = O L x O L 0 wit...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of high energy physics 2018-06, Vol.2018 (6), p.1-41, Article 123
Hauptverfasser: Faulkner, Thomas, Wang, Huajia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A bstract We study probe corrections to the Eigenstate Thermalization Hypothesis (ETH) in the context of 2D CFTs with large central charge and a sparse spectrum of low dimension operators. In particular, we focus on observables in the form of non-local composite operators O o b s x = O L x O L 0 with h L ≪ c . As a light probe, O o b s x is constrained by ETH and satisfies O o b s x h H ≈ O o b s x micro for a high energy energy eigenstate | h H 〉. In the CFTs of interests, O o b s x h H is related to a Heavy-Heavy-Light-Light (HL) correlator, and can be approximated by the vacuum Virasoro block, which we focus on computing. A sharp consequence of ETH for O o b s x is the so called “forbidden singularities”, arising from the emergent thermal periodicity in imaginary time. Using the monodromy method, we show that finite probe corrections of the form O h L / c drastically alter both sides of the ETH equality, replacing each thermal singularity with a pair of branch-cuts. Via the branch-cuts, the vacuum blocks are connected to infinitely many additional “saddles”. We discuss and verify how such violent modification in analytic structure leads to a natural guess for the blocks at finite c : a series of zeros that condense into branch cuts as c → ∞. We also discuss some interesting evidences connecting these to the Stoke’s phenomena, which are non-perturbative e −c effects. As a related aspect of these probe modifications, we also compute the Renyi-entropy S n in high energy eigenstates on a circle. For subsystems much larger than the thermal length, we obtain a WKB solution to the monodromy problem, and deduce from this the entanglement spectrum.
ISSN:1029-8479
1029-8479
DOI:10.1007/JHEP06(2018)123