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Information scrambling in quantum circuits

X. Mi, P. Roushan, C. Quintana, S. Mandrà, Jeffrey Marshall, C. Neill, F. Arute, K. Arya, J. Atalaya, R. Babbush, J. Bardin, R. Barends, J. Basso, A. Bengtsson, S. Boixo, A. Bourassa, M. Broughton, B. Buckley, D. Buell, B. Burkett, N. Bushnell, Zijun Chen, B. Chiaro, R. Collins, W. Courtney, S. Demura, A. Derk, A. Dunsworth, D. Eppens, C. Erickson, E. Farhi, A. Fowler, B. Foxen, C. Gidney, M. Giustina, J. Gross, M. Harrigan, S. Harrington, J. Hilton, A. Ho, Sabrina Hong, Trent Huang, W. Huggins, L. Ioffe, S. Isakov, E. Jeffrey, Zhang Jiang, Cody Jones, D. Kafri, J. Kelly, Seon Kim, A. Kitaev, P. Klimov, A. Korotkov, F. Kostritsa, D. Landhuis, P. Laptev, E. Lucero, O. Martin, J. McClean, T. McCourt, M. McEwen, A. Megrant, K. Miao, M. Mohseni, S. Montazeri, W. Mruczkiewicz, J. Mutus, O. Naaman, M. Neeley, M. Newman, M. Niu, T. O’Brien, A. Opremcak, E. Ostby, Bálint Pató, A. Petukhov, N. Redd, N. Rubin, D. Sank, K. Satzinger, V. Shvarts, D. Strain, M. Szalay, M. Trevithick, B. Villalonga, T. White, Z. Yao, P. Yeh, Adam Zalcman, H. Neven, I. Aleiner, K. Kechedzhi, V. Smelyanskiy, Yu Chen·January 21, 2021·DOI: 10.1126/science.abg5029
MedicinePhysics

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Abstract

Description Quantum scrambling Information spreading in interacting quantum systems is of relevance to a wide range of settings, from black holes to strange metals. Mi et al. used the Sycamore quantum processor to study this process. Through judicial design of quantum circuits, the researchers were able to separate the contributions of operator spreading and operator entanglement. Measuring the mean value and fluctuations of a specific correlator enabled quantifying these distinct contributions. —JS Operator spreading and entanglement were studied in a 53-qubit quantum processor. Interactions in quantum systems can spread initially localized quantum information into the exponentially many degrees of freedom of the entire system. Understanding this process, known as quantum scrambling, is key to resolving several open questions in physics. Here, by measuring the time-dependent evolution and fluctuation of out-of-time-order correlators, we experimentally investigate the dynamics of quantum scrambling on a 53-qubit quantum processor. We engineer quantum circuits that distinguish operator spreading and operator entanglement and experimentally observe their respective signatures. We show that whereas operator spreading is captured by an efficient classical model, operator entanglement in idealized circuits requires exponentially scaled computational resources to simulate. These results open the path to studying complex and practically relevant physical observables with near-term quantum processors.

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