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Condensed Matter > Statistical Mechanics

Title: Entanglement and Absorbing-State Transitions in Interactive Quantum Dynamics

Abstract: Nascent quantum computers motivate the exploration of quantum many-body systems in nontraditional scenarios. For example, it has become natural to explore the dynamics of systems evolving under both unitary evolution and measurement. Such systems can undergo dynamical phase transitions in the entanglement properties of quantum trajectories conditional on the measurement outcomes. Here, we explore dynamics in which one attempts to (locally) use those measurement outcomes to steer the system toward a target state, and we study the resulting phase diagram as a function of the measurement and feedback rates. Steering succeeds when the measurement and feedback rates exceed a threshold, yielding an absorbing-state transition in the trajectory-averaged density matrix. We argue that the absorbing-state transition generally occurs at different critical parameters from the entanglement transition in individual trajectories and has distinct critical properties. The efficacy of steering depends on the nature of the target state: in particular, for local dynamics targeting long-range correlated states, steering is necessarily slow and the entanglement and steering transitions are well separated in parameter space.
Comments: v2 - published version
Subjects: Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech); Disordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn); Quantum Physics (quant-ph)
Journal reference: Phys. Rev. B 109, L020304 (2024)
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.109.L020304
Cite as: arXiv:2211.12526 [cond-mat.stat-mech]
  (or arXiv:2211.12526v2 [cond-mat.stat-mech] for this version)

Submission history

From: Nicholas O'Dea [view email]
[v1] Tue, 22 Nov 2022 19:00:07 GMT (5290kb,D)
[v2] Thu, 14 Mar 2024 04:59:29 GMT (1968kb,D)

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