Entanglement and dynamics of diffusion-annihilation processes with Majorana defects
Adam Nahum, Brian Skinner

TL;DR
This paper explores the unique late-time dynamics and entanglement structures of Majorana defect systems undergoing diffusion and annihilation, revealing non-classical, topologically protected quantum information in open quantum systems.
Contribution
It introduces a coarse-grained model of Majorana defects with topologically protected quantum information and analyzes their nontrivial entanglement during diffusion-annihilation processes, including exact mappings to classical models.
Findings
Majorana defects exhibit non-classical, topologically protected quantum information.
The system's relaxation dynamics form a new universality class for topological domain wall coarsening.
Exact mappings to classical loop models enable analytical understanding of measurement-induced phase transitions.
Abstract
Coupling a many-body system to a thermal environment typically destroys the quantum coherence of its state, leading to an effective classical dynamics at the longest time scales. We show that systems with anyon-like defects can exhibit universal late-time dynamics that is stochastic, but fundamentally non-classical, because some of the quantum information about the state is topologically protected from the environment. Our coarse-grained model describes one-dimensional systems with domain-wall defects carrying Majorana modes. These defects undergo Brownian motion due to coupling with a bath. Since the fermion parity of a given pair of defects is nonlocal, it cannot be measured by the bath until the two defects happen to come into contact. We examine how such a system anneals to zero temperature via the diffusion and pairwise annihilation of Majorana defects, and we characterize the…
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