Undecidability of the Spectral Gap (short version)

From MaRDI portal
Publication:6259072

DOI10.1038/NATURE16059arXiv1502.04135WikidataQ50757032 ScholiaQ50757032MaRDI QIDQ6259072FDOQ6259072


Authors: Toby Cubitt, David Pérez-García, Michael M. Wolf Edit this on Wikidata


Publication date: 13 February 2015

Abstract: The spectral gap - the energy difference between the ground state and first excited state - is central to quantum many-body physics. Many challenging open problems, such as the Haldane conjecture, existence of gapped topological spin liquid phases, or the Yang-Mills gap conjecture, concern spectral gaps. These and other problems are particular cases of the general spectral gap problem: given a quantum many-body Hamiltonian, is it gapped or gapless? Here we prove that this is an undecidable problem. We construct families of quantum spin systems on a 2D lattice with translationally-invariant, nearest-neighbour interactions for which the spectral gap problem is undecidable. This result extends to undecidability of other low energy properties, such as existence of algebraically decaying ground-state correlations. The proof combines Hamiltonian complexity techniques with aperiodic tilings, to construct a Hamiltonian whose ground state encodes the evolution of a quantum phase-estimation algorithm followed by a universal Turing Machine. The spectral gap depends on the outcome of the corresponding Halting Problem. Our result implies that there exists no algorithm to determine whether an arbitrary model is gapped or gapless. It also implies that there exist models for which the presence or absence of a spectral gap is independent of the axioms of mathematics.













This page was built for publication: Undecidability of the Spectral Gap (short version)

Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6259072)