Nishimori's Cat: Stable Long-Range Entanglement from Finite-Depth Unitaries and Weak Measurements
Abstract
In the field of monitored quantum circuits, it has remained an open question whether finite-time protocols for preparing long-range entangled states lead to phases of matter that are stable to gate imperfections, that can convert projective into weak measurements. Here, we show that in certain cases, long-range entanglement persists in the presence of weak measurements, and gives rise to novel forms of quantum criticality. We demonstrate this explicitly for preparing the two-dimensional Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger cat state and the three-dimensional toric code as minimal instances. In contrast to random monitored circuits, 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 long-range entangled 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 nonzero Edwards-Anderson order parameter as an indicator of long-range entanglement in the two-dimensional 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.
Copyright and License
© 2023 American Physical Society.
Acknowledgement
We thank Ehud Altman, Zhen Bi, Max Block, Michael Buchhold, Matthew Fisher, Sam Garratt, Antoine Georges, Sarang Gopalakrishnan, Wenjie Ji, Roderich Moessner, Vadim Oganesyan, Drew Potter, Miles Stoudenmire, and Sagar Vijay for insightful discussions. The Cologne group acknowledges partial funding from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation)—project Grant 277101999—through CRC network SFB/TRR 183 (Projects A04, B01). R. V. is supported by the Harvard Quantum Initiative Postdoctoral Fellowship in Science and Engineering, and R. V. and A. V. by the Simons Collaboration on Ultra-Quantum Matter, which is a grant from the Simons Foundation (651440, A. V.). Part of this work was performed by R. V. and A. V. at the Aspen Center for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation Grant PHY-1607611. N. T. is supported by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at Caltech. The numerical simulations were performed on the JUWELS cluster at the Forschungszentrum Juelich. The Flatiron Institute is a division of the Simons Foundation.
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 1079-7114
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
- 277101999
- Harvard University
- Simons Foundation
- 651440
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-1607611
- Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics
- Caltech groups
- Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics