YoVDO

What Makes Holographic States Special?

Offered By: International Centre for Theoretical Sciences via YouTube

Tags

Quantum Gravity Courses Black Holes Courses Holography Courses Quantum Information Theory Courses Quantum Field Theory Courses AdS/CFT Correspondence Courses

Course Description

Overview

Save Big on Coursera Plus. 7,000+ courses at $160 off. Limited Time Only!
Explore the unique properties of holographic states in a 49-minute lecture by Abhijit Gadde from the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences. Delve into the intersection of quantum information, quantum field theory, and gravity as part of a comprehensive program on these cutting-edge topics. Gain insights into the AdS/CFT correspondence and its implications for quantum gravity, spacetime emergence, and the dynamics of quantum information. Examine how tools from quantum information theory have advanced understanding of black hole physics and information scrambling in chaotic quantum systems. Learn about the application of quantum information theory to quantum field theories and many-body dynamics, including novel proofs of constraints and characterizations of quantum matter phases. Discover the program's focus on quantum error correction, complexity growth, multiparty entanglement in holography, gravitational constraints on quantum information localization, and tensor network models in condensed matter and quantum gravity.

Syllabus

What Makes Holographic States Special? by Abhijit Gadde


Taught by

International Centre for Theoretical Sciences

Related Courses

Quantum Information Science II: Advanced quantum algorithms and information theory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology via edX
Physical Basics of Quantum Computing
Saint Petersburg State University via Coursera
Advanced Quantum Mechanics with Applications
Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati via Swayam
Selected chapters of quantum mechanics for modern engineering
National University of Science and Technology MISiS via edX
Predicting Many Properties of a Quantum System from Very Few Measurements
Simons Institute via YouTube