Twirled Perfect Tensor Networks: Computationally covariant holographic tensor networks
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 04:14 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Twirled perfect tensor networks satisfy computational covariance, bounding their complexity by the Python's Lunch value while obeying a lattice Ryu-Takayanagi formula for arbitrary boundary subregions.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central claim is that tensor networks built from twirled perfect tensors satisfy the computational covariance property, allowing arbitrary decompositions into low-complexity units under basic rules. This property implies that their complexity is bounded by the PLC value, in contrast to generic random tensor networks where the exponential complexity is not controlled by the PLC exponent. These networks also obey a lattice Ryu-Takayanagi formula for arbitrary boundary subregions.
What carries the argument
Twirled perfect tensors, which enforce computational covariance so that the network permits arbitrary low-complexity decompositions under basic rules.
If this is right
- Network complexity remains bounded by the PLC exponent rather than generic exponential scaling.
- The networks obey a lattice Ryu-Takayanagi formula for arbitrary boundary subregions.
- A discrete limitation from local postselection persists, unlike in gravity.
- The construction provides a flexible framework applicable beyond quantum gravity.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Such networks could enable more efficient classical simulations of black hole interior dynamics than fully random models.
- Testing computational covariance in other discrete holographic codes might reveal whether it is required for matching gravitational entropy formulas.
- The approach suggests designing tensor networks for quantum error correction that respect similar covariance constraints.
Load-bearing premise
The fine structure of tensor networks modeling gravity must obey computational covariance, allowing arbitrary decompositions into low-complexity units under basic rules.
What would settle it
Explicit construction of a small twirled perfect tensor network followed by direct computation of its circuit complexity to determine whether it exceeds the PLC bound.
Figures
read the original abstract
We define a novel class of tensor networks motivated by the Python's Lunch Conjecture (PLC) in local tensor network models of the black hole interior. We start from the observation that, for extended black brane states with short-range correlations, the PLC predicts a complexity that is smaller than the upper bound for generic short-range correlated states. We argue that the PLC makes implicit assumptions about the fine structure of the relevant tensor networks modeling gravity that render them non-generic. We demonstrate this explicitly in random tensor network models of the python's lunch, where the exponential complexity is not generally controlled by the PLC exponent. We trace the difference with the PLC to a lack of "computational covariance" in random tensor networks: while the PLC is motivated by an ability to arbitrarily decompose space into low-complexity units provided certain basic rules are followed, we show that random tensor networks do not generically have this property. We propose another class of tensor networks built from what we call "twirled perfect tensors" that do satisfy the computational covariance property and have a complexity bounded by the PLC value. We still find a discrete limitation from local postselection that appears to be absent in gravity. Moreover, we show that this class of tensor networks combines desirable holographic features of perfect tensor networks and random tensor networks, for example, it obeys a lattice Ryu-Takayanagi formula for arbitrary boundary subregions. Though motivated by holography, these tensor networks provide a flexible framework with potential applications beyond quantum gravity.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper defines twirled perfect tensor networks motivated by the Python's Lunch Conjecture (PLC) for local tensor network models of black hole interiors. It argues that random tensor networks lack computational covariance (the ability to arbitrarily decompose into low-complexity units under basic rules), so their complexity is not controlled by the PLC exponent, while the proposed twirled networks satisfy covariance, bound complexity by the PLC value, and obey a lattice Ryu-Takayanagi formula for arbitrary boundary subregions, thereby combining features of perfect and random tensor networks.
Significance. If the central claims hold, the construction supplies an explicit tensor-network realization of the fine-structure assumptions implicit in the PLC, yielding a complexity bound and an exact lattice RT formula that random networks lack. The explicit counter-example in random networks and the introduction of computational covariance as a distinguishing property are concrete contributions; the framework is noted to have potential uses outside quantum gravity.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract and the section defining the twirling operation and proving the RT property] The central claim that twirled perfect tensor networks obey an exact lattice RT formula for arbitrary boundary subregions (Abstract) is load-bearing for the assertion that the class 'combines desirable holographic features.' Because the construction is defined via twirling (an average over unitaries), the manuscript must demonstrate that the minimal-cut/entanglement-entropy equality holds instance-wise for each fixed network rather than only in expectation; otherwise the comparison to the exact RT formula in gravity is weakened.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that a 'discrete limitation from local postselection' remains; a one-sentence characterization of this limitation (and where it appears in the derivation) would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading of our manuscript and for providing this constructive comment. We respond to the major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and the section defining the twirling operation and proving the RT property] The central claim that twirled perfect tensor networks obey an exact lattice RT formula for arbitrary boundary subregions (Abstract) is load-bearing for the assertion that the class 'combines desirable holographic features.' Because the construction is defined via twirling (an average over unitaries), the manuscript must demonstrate that the minimal-cut/entanglement-entropy equality holds instance-wise for each fixed network rather than only in expectation; otherwise the comparison to the exact RT formula in gravity is weakened.
Authors: We appreciate the referee pointing out this important distinction. In our construction, the twirling is applied to the perfect tensors to achieve computational covariance. However, the proof that the lattice RT formula holds is based on the isometry properties of the individual twirled tensors, which ensure that the minimal cut equals the entanglement entropy for each fixed choice of the unitaries in the twirl. The averaging is only over the ensemble to establish the covariance property, but the RT equality is deterministic for each network. We will revise the manuscript to include an explicit clarification in the relevant section that the equality holds instance-wise, strengthening the comparison to the gravitational RT formula. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; construction is self-contained.
full rationale
The paper defines a new class of 'twirled perfect tensor networks' motivated by the PLC and shows they satisfy computational covariance (leading to the complexity bound) while also obeying a lattice RT formula. This is presented as an explicit construction and demonstration rather than a derivation that reduces by construction to its inputs. No equations, self-citation chains, or fitted predictions are exhibited in the provided text that would trigger any of the enumerated circularity patterns. The distinction from random tensor networks is argued directly from their lack of the covariance property. The overall derivation chain remains independent of the target results.
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