Public Research Seminar by Advanced Materials Thrust, Function Hub, HKUST(GZ) - Nishimori’s cat: stable long-range entanglement from finite-depth unitaries and weak measurements

2:00pm - 5:00pm
Zoom (ID: 979 7756 0698; PASSCODE: 700226) / W1, 2F, 202

In the field of monitored quantum circuits, it has remained an open question whether finite-time protocols for preparing long-range entangled (LRE) states lead to phases of matter which are stable to gate imperfections. Here we show that such gate imperfections effectively convert projective into weak measurements and that, in certain cases, long-range entanglement persists, even in the presence of weak measurements and gives rise to novel forms of quantum criticality. We demonstrate this explicitly for preparing the two-dimensional (2D) GHZ cat state and the three-dimensional (3D) toric code as minimal instances. In contrast to previous studies on measurement-induced phases and transitions, our circuit of gates and measurements is deterministic; the only randomness is in the measurement outcomes. We show how the randomness in these weak measurements allows us to track the solvable Nishimori line of the random-bond Ising model, rigorously establishing the stability of the glassy LRE states in two and three spatial dimensions. Away from this exactly solvable construction, we use hybrid tensor network and Monte Carlo simulations to obtain a non-zero Edwards-Anderson order parameter as an indicator of long-range entanglement in the 2D scenario. We argue that our protocol admits a natural implementation in existing quantum computing architectures, requiring only a depth-3 circuit on IBM’s heavy- hexagon transmon chips.

Speakers / Performers:
Dr. Guoyi ZHU
the Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Cologne

Guo-Yi Zhu (朱国毅) receives his bachelor degree from South China University of Technology in July 2014, and his PhD degree from Tsinghua University in July 2019. He has been working as a postdoctoral fellow for Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems from September 2019 to August 2021, and for the Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Cologne, from September 2021 until now. His research interests are long-range entangled topological states of matter, strongly correlated electrons, and some out-of-equilibrium quantum manybody dynamics.

Language
English
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Faculty and staff
PG students
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Organizer
Function Hub, HKUST(GZ)
Center of Quantum Science and Technology, HKUST(GZ)
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