Quantum Entanglement Growth Under Random Unitary Dynamics
Adam Nahum, Jonathan Ruhman, Sagar Vijay, and Jeongwan Haah

TL;DR
This paper investigates how entanglement grows in many-body quantum systems under random unitary dynamics, revealing universal KPZ behavior in 1D and proposing new heuristics for entanglement growth in noisy and noiseless systems.
Contribution
It establishes a universal KPZ framework for noisy entanglement growth and introduces a simple minimal cut picture applicable to generic Hamiltonian systems.
Findings
Entanglement entropy growth in 1D follows KPZ universality.
Noise induces KPZ scaling in entanglement fluctuations.
Proposes a minimal cut heuristic for entanglement growth in noiseless systems.
Abstract
Characterizing how entanglement grows with time in a many-body system, for example after a quantum quench, is a key problem in non-equilibrium quantum physics. We study this problem for the case of random unitary dynamics, representing either Hamiltonian evolution with time--dependent noise or evolution by a random quantum circuit. Our results reveal a universal structure behind noisy entanglement growth, and also provide simple new heuristics for the `entanglement tsunami' in Hamiltonian systems without noise. In 1D, we show that noise causes the entanglement entropy across a cut to grow according to the celebrated Kardar--Parisi--Zhang (KPZ) equation. The mean entanglement grows linearly in time, while fluctuations grow like and are spatially correlated over a distance . We derive KPZ universal behaviour in three complementary ways,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
