Complexity Growth in Integrable and Chaotic Models
ORAL
Abstract
Defining quantum complexity has been a long standing problem in condensed matter physics, quantum information and more recently quantum gravity. Using gate complexity from the theory of computation, one can upper-bound the unitary evolution by computing the length of the geodesic generated by the Hamiltonian on the U(N) manifold. In this formalism, one can study a type of local obstruction to complexity growth that is the appearance of conjugate points along the geodesic. We show that perturbatively, in the free SYKq=2 model, the conjugate point appears at the length of order of O(N1/2), and that for an integrable interacting theory - a deformed free SYKq=2, the complexity is upper bounded by O(poly(N)), and that in the chaotic SYKq>2, the conjugate points move away to O(exp(N)). This matches up with the intuition that integrable theory should generate simple unitaries and chaotic Hamiltonians should generate complex unitary dynamics. To combine the complexity theory and the quantum thermalization, we explore the complexity of the eigenstate of free, integrable interacting and chaotic Hamiltonian and use the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis to predict the appearance of conjugate points in chaotic systems.
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Publication: JHEP07(2021)011
Presenters
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Yue Li
University of Pennsylvania
Authors
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Yue Li
University of Pennsylvania
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Vijay Balasubramanian
University of Pennsylvania
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Arjun Kar
University of British Columbia
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Onkar Parrikar
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research