Temporal Griffiths effects and ultrafast criticality in monitored quantum circuits
ORAL
Abstract
We investigate quantum circuits with temporally random measurement rates, uncovering a rich dynamical phase diagram that deviates significantly from conventional measurement-driven transitions. Our primary discovery is that any spatially-uniform randomness in the measurement rate destabilizes the typical volume-law entangled phase, leading to the emergence of novel temporal Griffiths regions. This destabilization gives rise to a new phase marked by sub-volume steady-state entanglement scaling. At the critical point, we identify striking ultrafast dynamics, reflected in an activated scaling relation tΨτ ~ log(L), corresponding to a vanishing space-time dynamical exponent z→0. This behavior can be understood as a space-time rotation of the infinite-randomness fixed point seen in spatially random models. Through extensive numerical simulations of stabilizer circuits, we analyze information propagation and entanglement dynamics, offering a comprehensive physical understanding of this novel phase diagram and its criticality.
–
Presenters
-
Snir Gazit
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Authors
-
Snir Gazit
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
-
Gal Shkolnik
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
-
David A Huse
Princeton University
-
Sarang Gopalakrishnan
Princeton University, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, Princeton University Princeton
-
Jedediah Pixley
Rutgers University