Title: An overview of topological recursion in random matrices
Speaker: Betrand Eynard
Abstract: Topological recursion was initially introduced as a method for recursively solving Schwinger-Dyson equations in random matrices, order by order in the large N expansion. This is useful for all theories that can be modeled with random matrices, this includes topological strings, some SYK aspects and the Weil-Petersson volumes, i.e. the JT gravity. We shall review what is topological recursion, how it can be used, and its beautiful mathematical properties: special geometry, modular invariance, integrable system...
Title: RMT Models to solve the Quantum Information Paradox
Speaker: Mario Kieburg
Abstract: The information paradox of black holes sits at the center of compatibility of General Relativity and Quantum Physics since Hawking postulated that black holes should radiate thermally while quantum physics requires unitary evolution. It was Page who suggested a statistical approach by bipartition a Hilbert space and average over all pure states in a uniform way. He found with the help of the entanglement entropy that almost all states look maximally mixed in the considered subsystem. The critique of this approach was that it would require strong correlations between particles that are spatially and temporarily far apart. We investigated with a new, more physical random matrix model for bosonic modes whether this critique is justified. This model considers bosonic Gaussian pure states conditioned on their marginals by Hawking's predictions but otherwise uniformly distributed on the resulting compact manifold. We found that actually with high probability any two modes are separable. In the talk, I will summarize this ongoing research and what type of progress we have made.
NO RECORDING
Title: Chaos and universality in the dissipative SYK model
Speaker: Lucas Sa
Abstract: The dissipative SYK model is an analytically tractable setting for exploring spectral and dynamical signatures of quantum chaos in open many-body systems. I will discuss our recent work identifying universal spectral features and their connection to chaotic dynamics. In the bulk of the spectrum, the model exhibits non-Hermitian RMT statistics in different universality classes, which can be tuned by changing the model parameters. Beyond this universal bulk, the spectrum also contains special modes that reveal finer properties of dissipative chaotic dynamics. In particular, the Liouvillian gap, which controls the approach to equilibrium, has a non-monotonic dependence on dissipation strength (signaling the existence of an exceptional point). In the thermodynamic limit, the gap does not vanish even when the dissipation strength goes to zero—the first recognized instance of anomalous relaxation, which now serves as a dynamical signature of quantum chaos (for both isolated and weakly-dissipative systems). The spectrum also hosts special, symmetry-protected eigenmodes. These include topological transient modes, which enhance dissipative universality and ergodicity, and “Lindblad scars”, which evade it. Together, these results highlight how the dissipative SYK model provides a simple yet rich platform for understanding the interplay between chaos, dissipation, and nonergodic structures in open quantum many-body dynamics.
Title: Dissipation as a Resource: From Transient to Steady-State Chaos
Speaker: Lea Santos
Abstract: Ginibre statistics is often taken as an indicator of dissipative chaotic dynamics. However, the Grobe-Haake-Sommers conjecture, which links Ginibre statistics to chaos and 2D Poisson statistics to integrability, can break down. This talk shows that Ginibre spectral correlations primarily reflect short-time instability and therefore signal transient chaotic dynamics rather than steady-state chaos. The quantum-classical correspondence can instead be restored through a dynamical perspective based on information scrambling, using the von Neumann entropy and out-of-time-ordered correlators, which distinguish transient from steady-state chaotic behavior. Building on this result, it is further shown that dissipation can serve as a tool to regulate the duration of chaotic dynamics and information scrambling, enabling the recovery of coherence at long times.
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Title: ETH matrix model for DSSYK
Speaker: Kazumi Okuyama
Abstract: I discuss the ETH matrix model for DSSYK introduced by Jafferis et al. Topics of my talk include the discrete volume of the moduli space and the relation to de Sitter JT gravity.
NO RECORDING
Title: Symmetry in Non-Hermitian Quantum Many-Body Systems: From the Classification of PT-Symmetric Quantum Chaos to Measurement-Induced Phase Transitions
Speaker: Yin Can
Abstract: We propose a symmetry classification of PT-symmetric quantum many-body systems using a two-site non-Hermitian Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model. This enriches the classification of non-Hermitian quantum chaos by revealing a more nuanced structure based on the existence of fully real modes that encode Hermitian level statistics. The number of these modes serves as a topological invariant and defines new universality classes. In the second half of the talk, we turn to the entanglement dynamics of monitored one-dimensional free fermionic chains with and without disorder. By mapping the problem to a nonlinear sigma model, we show that the symmetries of the problem, which are different in clean and disordered cases, also play an important role in identifying the conditions for the existence of measurement-induced phase transitions. These theoretical results are confirmed by explicit numerical simulations on Graphics Processing Units which enable us to reach system sizes of $L \sim 20000$, an order of magnitude larger than those in previous studies.
Title: Renormalization group flows of the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model
Speaker: Damian Galante
Abstract: Studying renormalisation group flows of finite-temperature, large-N, strongly coupled quantum systems is a challenging problem, closely tied to the emergence of a dual bulk spacetime. The Sachdev–Ye–Kitaev (SYK) model provides a rare setting where this can be explored with high precision, combining numerical results at finite N with analytic control in the large-N (and large q) limit. In this talk, I will present a landscape of possible infrared behaviours of the SYK model, which may (but need not) be dominated by Schwarzian physics. I will discuss diagnostics based on thermodynamic entropy, correlation functions, and dynamical probes such as Lyapunov and Krylov exponents.
General Public Lecture
Lecture at 5:00pm, Della Pietra Family Auditorium – 103
Reception, 4:15pm, Simons Center lobby
Title: The TRUTH About Quantum Computing
Abstract: Yes, scalable quantum computing should actually work! Sooner than many expect, which will create a huge headache when it breaks the encryption currently used to protect the Internet. But no, we don't think quantum computing can do most of what the popular articles promise in AI and optimization and so forth. Come to this talk to learn about why!
This talk is designed for a general audience.
Title: A model for DSSYK at infinite temperature
Speaker: Ahmed Almheiri
Abstract: Abstract: DSSYK at infinite temperature can be modelled by the algebra of the Quantum Harmonic Oscillator. This model has several puzzling features that appear to be reminiscent of dS, for instance, that perturbed wormholes grow more slowly than unperturbed wormholes. I will also describe upcoming work on reinterpretting the Harmonic Oscillator Hamiltonian as describing eternal traversable wormholes.
Title: c=1 strings as a matrix integral
Speaker: Scott Collier
Abstract: I will argue for a triality between three distinct formulations of the c=1 string: the string worldsheet, matrix quantum mechanics, and a new double-scaled matrix integral description governed by topological recursion. Starting from the complex Liouville string, we derive closed-form Feynman rules for c=1 string amplitudes as intersection numbers on the moduli space of Riemann surfaces. These expressions naturally compute amplitudes on a discretized target space; the physical S-matrix is recovered by restriction to the first Brillouin zone. We use this description to prove perturbative spacetime unitarity, derive a Mirzakhani-type recursion relation for the discretized amplitudes, and find detailed agreement with known matrix quantum mechanics results.
Title: Emergent States and Algebras from Double-Scaling Limit of Pure States in SYK
Speaker: Jiuci Xu
Abstract: Recent work has highlighted a subtle feature of large-$N$ limits in holography: a sequence of pure microscopic states need not remain pure with respect to the emergent algebra of observables. In this talk, I will discuss this phenomenon for Kourkoulou--Maldacena (KM) states in the double-scaling limit of the SYK model, and show that their ensemble-averaged algebraic description depends crucially on which observables are retained in the limit. For fermionic operators of size $p\sim N^{1/2}$, generic operators converge to the usual chord operators of double-scaled SYK. The resulting von Neumann algebra is the standard Type II$_1$ factor, and the KM pure states at infinite temperature converge to the tracial state. In this sense, generic probes lose access to microscopic purity. I will then explain how this conclusion changes once one includes a special class of operators adapted to the KM state. These operators survive the double-scaling limit as dressed chord creation and annihilation operators, with the dressing encoding the distance to the KM state through the Euclidean bulk. With these operators included, the limiting algebra becomes a Type I$_\infty$ factor, and the sequence of KM states converges to a pure state. This provides a solvable example in which adding sufficiently state-adapted operators to the emergent algebra restores access to the purity of the underlying state.
Along the way, I will describe the modified chord rules governing the dressed operators and explain their correlation functions, semiclassical limit, and connections to JT gravity coupled to matter and end-of-the-world branes. I will also discuss a solvable deformation to the Hamiltonian in which bound states emerge above a critical threshold. I will end by drawing broader lessons for emergent algebras in holography, including possible analogies with black hole interiors and closed universes.
Title: Theoretical Computer Science and AI Alignment
Abstract:
I'll survey some areas where I think theoretical computer science, math, and statistics can potentially contribute to the urgent quest to align powerful AI with humane values. These areas include: the watermarking of AI outputs, mechanistic interpretability (including Paul Christiano's "No-Coincidence Principle," and succinct digests of the training process to aid interpretability), and theoretical guarantees for out-of-distribution generalization.
Title: Chaos and the Berry curvature of BPS microstates
Speaker: Ohad Mamroud
Abstract: Holographic theories present a fascinating case where the same physics can be described from two different points of view: either as a (strongly coupled) quantum field theory, or as a theory of quantum gravity. Certain subspaces of the Hilbert space can have very different gravitational descriptions, like those associated with black holes or with horizonless geometries. In the field theory description, it is believed that this distinction is encoded in how chaotic is the subspace, with various ways of defining what we mean by chaos. In this talk, based on ongoing work with Yiming Chen, Sean Colin-Ellerin, and Kyriakos Papadodimas, I will concentrate on the case of degenerate supersymmetric states, where we conjecture that these subspaces can differ in the way they behave under (marginal) deformations of the theory. These deformations map the subspace into itself, inducing a Berry matrix that describes the mixing of these states. For states associated with black holes, the resulting Berry curvature is a strongly chaotic, exhibiting eigenvalue repulsion throughout its spectrum. For states associated with other kinds of geometries, it is not. We support this conjecture by computations in various theories, including super JT gravity, SYK, N=4 super Yang Mills, and the D1-D5 system.
NO RECORDING
Title: Heavy-Tailed Distributions — Invitation to a new Double-Scaled SYK Model
Speaker: Budhaditya Bhattacharjee
Abstract: I shall present a study of the Lévy Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (LSYK) model, in which the disorder couplings are drawn from a Lévy Stable (heavy-tailed) distribution parameterized by a tail exponent $\mu$ between (0,2]. The spectral properties of the model will be discussed for finite N, examining the eigenvalue distribution, long- and short-range correlations, and extreme statistics. The model demonstrates a crossover from chaotic to integrable behavior as the distribution becomes increasingly heavy-tailed, which is investigated through a hierarchical analysis based on the multi-fractal structure of the Lévy Stable distribution. This crossover is explained as a genuine many-body effect, distinct from the mobility-edge-driven transition found in Lévy random matrices. An exact solution of the LSYK model in the large-N limit will be discussed, focusing on large-q and strongly coupled regimes. The chaotic properties will be discussed through chaos exponents. The parameter $\mu$ will be shown to continuously interpolate between a free theory at $\mu = 0$ and the maximally chaotic Gaussian SYK model at $\mu = 2$, with non-maximal chaos throughout the intermediate regime. Thermodynamic quantities will be discussed and compared with their Gaussian SYK counterparts, with interpretations discussed in the context of the holographic dual and non-Fermi liquid theory. Finally, I shall discuss possible double- or triple-scaled generalization of this model and the physical properties that we expect from such a model.
Title: Double Scaled Tensor Model
Speaker: Fedor Popov
Abstract: We develop an explicit construction of disorder-free tensor models that exhibit melonic large-$N$ dynamics with arbitrary potentials that are odd in the fields. Unlike previous constructions where the interaction order is tightly constrained by the tensor rank, our model utilizes a single tensor field transforming in the bi-antisymmetric representation of $O(N) \times O(N)$. We explicitly construct interaction vertices for any odd integer $p \ge 5$ and prove that the resulting perturbative expansions are dominated by melonic diagrams in the large-$N$ limit. This construction allows us to define a supersymmetric model that possesses a double-scaling limit in which the interaction order $p$ and the rank $N$ are taken to infinity simultaneously. We argue that this limit closely resembles the supersymmetric double-scaled Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (DSSYK) model while being a purely unitary, disorder-less quantum mechanical system. Finally, we extend this framework to higher dimensions and identify a new perturbative bosonic and supersymmetric melonic conformal fixed point for quintic interactions.
Title: Non-commutative geometry of the DSSYK model
Speaker: Mikhail Isachenkov
Abstract: Double-scaled SYK model is known to give rise to discretized bulk geometry, captured by combinatorics of chord diagrams and integrable structures behind it. In this talk I will discuss a couple of approaches (using tools from representation theory and non-commutative geometry) to a more detailed understanding of that discretized geometry and its physics implications. I will mainly focus on the approach by von Neumann algebraic (vNa) versions of quantum homogeneous spaces. First, I'll show how the vNa quantum group deforming the normalizer of SU(1,1) Lie group in its complexification plays a natural role of symmetry algebra for the operator algebra of DSSYK. The technical result making this analysis possible is a novel generalized Gauss decomposition of the vNa quantum group. We will then see how both AdS and de Sitter physics can be extracted by picking appropriate homogeneous spaces of that vNa quantum group. Some things difficult in other setups come 'for free' in this approach, for example length/chord number positivity and discreteness. Time permitting, I'll discuss work in progress on the more traditional, 'Connes-style', approach to the non-commutative geometry of DSSYK.
NO RECORDING
Title: q-Askey deformations of Double-Scaled SYK
Speaker: Sergio Aguilar
Abstract: We construct families of deformations of the double-scaled SYK model and investigate their bulk interpretation. We introduce microscopic deformations of the SYK model which, after ensemble averaging, and in the double-scaling limit, encode recurrence relations of basic orthogonal polynomials in the q-Askey scheme. For certain families of deformations in the semiclassical limit, at finite temperature, the chord number, encoding Krylov complexity, corresponds to the length of an Einstein-Rosen bridge connecting an end-of-the-world brane to an anti-de Sitter asymptotic boundary. By increasing one of the deformation parameters, the models eventually exhibit discrete energy levels signaling a geometric transition in sine dilaton gravity, like in Cauchy slice holography. Via the SYK-Schur duality, Krylov complexity admits a representation-theoretic interpretation as the spread of the SU(2) spin in the index of an $\mathcal{N}=2$ SU(2) gauge theory. We investigate the operator algebras of the deformed theories, which are type II$_1$ or type I$_\infty$ factors, depending on the operators that are included. The entanglement entropy between the type II$_1$ algebras manifests as an extremal surface through the Ryu-Takayanagi formula. At last, we show q-Askey deformations encode baby universes in the bulk.
Title: The Hartle–Hawking state and quantum mechanics for de Sitter observers
Speaker: Ying Zhao
Abstract: The one-state statement for closed universes has sparked considerable discussion. In this talk, we examine its physical meaning in the context of the Hartle–Hawking state and de Sitter space. We argue that the one-state property of closed universes is fully compatible with the finite-dimensional quantum mechanics experienced by observers inside de Sitter space, and that this compatibility requires neither mixing of α-sectors nor any modification of the rules of the gravitational path integral. The apparent tension is resolved by sharply distinguishing the baby-universe Hilbert space (the space of closed universes viewed from the outside) from the bulk Hilbert space that governs quantum mechanics for an observer inside a single de Sitter universe.
Title: Bouncing off stringy singularities
Speaker: Matthew Dodelson
Abstract: In AdS/CFT, the black hole singularity is encoded as a divergence in a certain analytic continuation of the two-point function. This divergence corresponds to a null geodesic that bounces off the singularity. In this talk, we will study the fate of this null geodesic at finite 't Hooft coupling, finding that it is smoothed out by stringy effects in the example of the SYK model. We will then generalize this computation to matrix quantum mechanics. Our results will uncover a fractal structure underlying the black hole singularity.
Title: Quantum Symmetry and Geometry in DSSYK
Speaker: Jeremy van der Heijden
Abstract: In this talk, I will explore the quantum group structure underlying the chord algebra in the double-scaled SYK model. Starting from chord operators acting on the doubled Hilbert space, I will show that the one-particle sector organizes into positive discrete series representations of U_q(\mathfrak{su}(1,1)). The rules governing chord interactions then naturally align with the fusion rules of these representations, providing a systematic way to construct multi-particle states. Within this framework, the quantum 6j-symbols that appear in crossing configurations of chords arise directly from the fusion data. I will conclude by discussing how these algebraic structures suggest a gravitational bulk dual.
https://scgp.stonybrook.edu/archives/47175
Title: Factorization and pdfs
Speaker: Dave Soper (Glauber singularities and factorization), Pavel Nadolsky (Precision tests of QCD factorization), Eric Laenen (Factorization and resummation), Aniruddha Venkata (Drell Levy Yan relationship and factorization)
Abstract: Each speaker will present for 10 minutes, followed by a 50 minute discussion
Title: Higher orders
Speaker: Johannes Bluemlein ([Remote] The structure of the proton: light, heavy, unpolarized, polarized),
Babis Anastasiou (Finite integrands for hard scattering amplitudes in QCD), Lorenzo Magnea (A long-distance story), Vittorio Del Duca (Soft and/or Collinear), Yao Ma (Regions in Asymptotic Expansions of Amplitudes)
Abstract: Each speaker will present for 10 minutes, followed by a 50 minute discussion
Title: Energy Flow
Speaker: Gilad Perez (From the hierarcy problem to jet substructure & E-correlators), Lance Dixon (Homage to Jets and Sterman), Ian Moult (50 Years of George's Energy Flow Operator,) Kyle Lee (Anomalous Applications of George's Operator), Claudio Coriano (Sum Rules of Gravitational Form Factors in QCD, the trace Anomaly and CFT)
Abstract: Each speaker will present for 10 minutes, followed by a 40 minute discussion
Title: Jets and Shapes
Speaker: Joey Huston (Jets at Hadron-Hadron Colliders), Zhongbo Kang (Jets for 3D Imaging), Christopher Lee (Boosting the physics of event shapes in QCD and SCET), Ozan Erdogan (Weighted cross sections and IR safety in coordinate space)
Abstract: Each speaker will present for 10 minutes, followed by a 50 minute discussion
Title: Resummation
Speaker: Nikolaos Kidonakis (Soft anomalous dimensions in QCD), Andrei Belitsky (Walking Sudakov), Werner Vogelsang (Single-particle cross sections in QCD), Stan Srednyak (Local renormalization group and the structure of the proton), Anna Kulesza (Soft QCD for gravity).
Abstract: Each speaker will present for 10 minutes, followed by a 40 minute discussion
Title: Nuclei
Speaker: Stephen Libby ([Remote] - Computing Atomic Physics with ‘Quantum Advantaged’ Algorithms), Alfred Mueller (The size of gluon occupancies in saturation), Jianwei Qiu (QCD multiple scattering and jet production in nuclear medium), Fred Olness (CTEQ and CSS: A Celebration of George’s Contributions to Science and Community), Maria Tejeda-Yeomans (Jets in the Quark-Gluon Plasma)
Abstract: Each speaker will present for 10 minutes, followed by a 40 minute discussion.