Gravitational Wave-Induced Scrambling Delay in SYK Wormhole Teleportation
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Abstract
Traversable wormhole teleportation in the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) model links quantum channel integrity to black hole interior dynamics, using teleportation fidelity to probe holographic scrambling. We subject the SYK boundary to a gravitational-wave (GW)-inspired periodic Floquet deformation, mimicking a leading-order metric-strain perturbation from the JT-gravity dictionary. We characterize the channel response via exact numerical time evolution with disorder averaging at $βJ = 2$. The drive produces a coherent, frequency-selective fidelity suppression, yielding four main results: (i) two amplitude regimes separated near $\varepsilon \sim J$ (perturbative sensing vs.\ strong-drive); (ii) the channel acts as a low-pass filter, most sensitive at $ω\lesssim β^{-1}$ with monotone recovery above the thermal scale; (iii) an inspiral chirp drive delays the fidelity peak by $Δt_{\rm scr}^{(\rm fid)} = +0.11\, J^{-1}$, corroborated by an out-of-time-order correlator (OTOC) diagnostic ($Δt_{\rm scr}^{(\rm OTOC)} = +0.20\, J^{-1}$), establishing a genuine scrambling delay; and (iv) the effects persist across $N \in \{10, 12, 14, 16\}$ Majorana modes, indicating no systematic finite-size suppression. These results establish that holographic teleportation channels degrade gracefully under GW-inspired boundary deformations, with direct implications for near-term quantum processor implementations of traversable wormholes.