Entanglement in BF theory. Part II. Edge-modes
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Abstract
We consider the entanglement entropy arising from edge-modes in Abelian p-form topological field theories in d dimensions on arbitrary spatial topology and across arbitrary entangling surfaces. We find a series of descending area laws plus universal corrections proportional to the Betti numbers of the entangling surface, which can be taken as a higher- dimensional version of the “topological entanglement entropy”. Our calculation comes in two flavors: firstly, through an induced edge-mode theory appearing on the regulated entangling surface in a replica path integral and secondly through a more rigorous definition of the entanglement entropy through an extended Hilbert space. Along the way we establish several key results that are of their own merit. We explain how the edge-mode theory is a novel combination of (p − 1)-form and (d – p − 2)-form Maxwell theories linked by a chirality condition, in what we coin a chiral mixed Maxwell theory. We explicitly evaluate the thermal partition function of this theory. Additionally we show that the extended Hilbert space is completely organized into representations of an infinite-dimensional, centrally extended current algebra which naturally generalizes 2d Kac-Moody algebras to arbitrary dimension and topology. We construct the Verma modules and the representation characters of this algebra. Lastly, we connect the two approaches, showing that the thermal partition function of the chiral mixed Maxwell theory is precisely an extended representation character of our current algebra, establishing an exact correspondence of the edge-mode theory and the entanglement spectrum.
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Acknowledgements: It is a pleasure to thank Dionysios Anninos, Sean Hartnoll, Diego Hofman, Keivan Namjou, Onkar Parrikar, Ronak Soni, Aron Wall, and Chen Yang for discussions. We are grateful to the authors of [11] (particularly Tarun Grover) for correspondence. JRF thanks Rob Leigh and Matthew Lapa for early conversations that became the germ of this work. JRF also thanks the University of Amsterdam for hospitality. SV also thanks the University of Cambridge, and the ICISE in Quy Nhon, Vietnam for hospitality. JRF is supported by STFC consolidated grant ST/T000694/1 and by Simons Foundation Award number 620869. SV is supported by the NWO Spinoza prize awarded to Erik Verlinde.

