Onset of scrambling as a dynamical transition in tunable-range quantum circuits
ORAL
Abstract
In a fast scrambling many-body quantum system, information is spread and entanglement is built up on a timescale that grows logarithmically with the system size. This is of fundamental interest in understanding the dynamics of many-body systems and in efficiently producing entangled resource states and error-correcting codes. In this work, we identify a dynamical transition marking the onset of scrambling in quantum circuits with different levels of long-range connectivity. In particular, we show that as a function of the interaction range for circuits of different structures, the tripartite mutual information exhibits a scaling collapse around a critical point between two clearly defined regimes of different dynamical behavior. We study this transition analytically in a related long-range Brownian circuit model and show how the transition can be mapped onto the statistical mechanics of a long-range Ising model in a particular region of parameter space. This mapping predicts mean-field critical exponents, which are consistent with the critical exponents extracted from Clifford circuit numerics. In addition to systems with conventional power-law interactions, we identify the same phenomenon in deterministic, sparse circuits that can be realized in experiments with neutral atom arrays.
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Publication: S. Kuriyattil, T. Hashizume, G. Bentsen and A. J. Daley; Onset of Scrambling as a DynamicalTransition in Tunable-Range Quantum Circuits; PRX Quantum 4 030325 (2023)<br>T. Hashizume, S. Kuriyattil, A. J. Daley, and G. Bentsen, Tunable geometries in sparse clifford circuits, Symmetry 14, 666 (2022)
Presenters
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Sridevi Kuriyattil
University of Strathclyde
Authors
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Sridevi Kuriyattil
University of Strathclyde
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Tomohiro Hashizume
University of Strathclyde
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Gregory Bentsen
Brandeis University
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Andrew J Daley
University of Strathclyde