Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?

Randomness is an essential tool in many disciplines of modern sciences, such as cryptography, black hole physics, random matrix theory, and Monte Carlo sampling. In quantum systems, random operations can be obtained via random circuits thanks to so-called q-designs and play a central role in condens...

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Main Authors: Leonardo Banchi, Daniel Burgarth, Michael J. Kastoryano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2017-10-01
Series:Physical Review X
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.041015
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spelling doaj-19c87b3f55ce4e36a99415c93b978fb52020-11-24T23:05:52ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review X2160-33082017-10-017404101510.1103/PhysRevX.7.041015Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?Leonardo BanchiDaniel BurgarthMichael J. KastoryanoRandomness is an essential tool in many disciplines of modern sciences, such as cryptography, black hole physics, random matrix theory, and Monte Carlo sampling. In quantum systems, random operations can be obtained via random circuits thanks to so-called q-designs and play a central role in condensed-matter physics and in the fast scrambling conjecture for black holes. Here, we consider a more physically motivated way of generating random evolutions by exploiting the many-body dynamics of a quantum system driven with stochastic external pulses. We combine techniques from quantum control, open quantum systems, and exactly solvable models (via the Bethe ansatz) to generate Haar-uniform random operations in driven many-body systems. We show that any fully controllable system converges to a unitary q-design in the long-time limit. Moreover, we study the convergence time of a driven spin chain by mapping its random evolution into a semigroup with an integrable Liouvillian and finding its gap. Remarkably, we find via Bethe-ansatz techniques that the gap is independent of q. We use mean-field techniques to argue that this property may be typical for other controllable systems, although we explicitly construct counterexamples via symmetry-breaking arguments to show that this is not always the case. Our findings open up new physical methods to transform classical randomness into quantum randomness, via a combination of quantum many-body dynamics and random driving.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.041015
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leonardo Banchi
Daniel Burgarth
Michael J. Kastoryano
spellingShingle Leonardo Banchi
Daniel Burgarth
Michael J. Kastoryano
Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?
Physical Review X
author_facet Leonardo Banchi
Daniel Burgarth
Michael J. Kastoryano
author_sort Leonardo Banchi
title Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?
title_short Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?
title_full Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?
title_fullStr Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?
title_full_unstemmed Driven Quantum Dynamics: Will It Blend?
title_sort driven quantum dynamics: will it blend?
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review X
issn 2160-3308
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Randomness is an essential tool in many disciplines of modern sciences, such as cryptography, black hole physics, random matrix theory, and Monte Carlo sampling. In quantum systems, random operations can be obtained via random circuits thanks to so-called q-designs and play a central role in condensed-matter physics and in the fast scrambling conjecture for black holes. Here, we consider a more physically motivated way of generating random evolutions by exploiting the many-body dynamics of a quantum system driven with stochastic external pulses. We combine techniques from quantum control, open quantum systems, and exactly solvable models (via the Bethe ansatz) to generate Haar-uniform random operations in driven many-body systems. We show that any fully controllable system converges to a unitary q-design in the long-time limit. Moreover, we study the convergence time of a driven spin chain by mapping its random evolution into a semigroup with an integrable Liouvillian and finding its gap. Remarkably, we find via Bethe-ansatz techniques that the gap is independent of q. We use mean-field techniques to argue that this property may be typical for other controllable systems, although we explicitly construct counterexamples via symmetry-breaking arguments to show that this is not always the case. Our findings open up new physical methods to transform classical randomness into quantum randomness, via a combination of quantum many-body dynamics and random driving.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.7.041015
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