Long-range nonstabilizerness and quantum codes, phases, and complexity
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Abstract
As a necessary resource for quantum computational advantage, quantum magic (nonstabilizerness) is of fundamental importance in the study of quantum computation and physics. We develop a systematic theory of \emph{long-range magic (LRM)} -- nonstabilizerness that cannot be erased by shallow unitary circuits -- and demonstrate its broad relevance. By bridging LRM with fault-tolerant logical gate theory, we show the emergence of LRM families from quantum error-correcting codes and devise a simple yet powerful method for testing transversal logical gates. Further, we introduce and characterize \emph{LRM phases} in which all ground states exhibit LRM, and identify certain non-Abelian topological orders as representative examples. Then, adopting a complexity theory perspective, we demonstrate the classicality of non-LRM systems in e.g.~preparation and learning settings, and present a ``no low-energy trivial magic'' (NLTM) conjecture with key motivation in the quantum PCP context, for which our LRM results suggest a promising route. Additionally, we demonstrate how to diagnose LRM with correlation functions. The concepts and results admit substantive extensions to approximate (robust) and nongeometric scenarios. Our LRM theory illuminates profound new connections among quantum resources, computational advantage, error correction and fault tolerance, many-body physics, and complexity theory.