6–11 Jun 2021
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America/Toronto timezone
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Hot qubits on the horizon

7 Jun 2021, 13:06
3m
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Underline Conference System

Oral not-in-competition (Graduate Student) / Orale non-compétitive (Étudiant(e) du 2e ou 3e cycle) Theoretical Physics / Physique théorique (DTP-DPT) M2-2 Classical and Quantum Gravity II (DTP) / Gravité classique et quantique II (DPT)

Speaker

Gregory Kaplanek

Description

Perturbation theory for gravitating quantum systems tends to fail at very late times (a type of perturbative breakdown known as secular growth). We argue that gravity is best treated as a medium/environment in such situations, where reliable late-time predictions can be made using tools borrowed from quantum optics. To show how this works, we study the explicit example of a qubit hovering just outside the event horizon of a Schwarzschild black hole (coupled to a real scalar field) and reliably extract the late-time behaviour for the qubit state. At very late times, the so-called Unruh-DeWitt detector is shown to asymptote to a thermal state at the Hawking temperature.

Primary author

Co-author

Clifford Burgess (High Energy Physics Group - McGill University)

Presentation materials

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