Complexity of Pure and Mixed Qubit Geodesic Paths on Curved Manifolds
Carlo Cafaro, Paul M. Alsing

TL;DR
This paper uses information geometry to compare the complexity of pure and mixed qubit state evolutions on curved manifolds, revealing that mixed states exhibit higher complexity and that different metrics influence this complexity.
Contribution
It introduces a complexity measure based on geodesic volume and analyzes pure and mixed qubit state evolutions using this measure on different quantum state manifolds.
Findings
Mixed state evolution is more complex than pure state evolution.
The proposed complexity measure aligns with geodesic length rankings.
Complexity is softer on the Bures manifold compared to the Sjoqvist manifold.
Abstract
It is known that mixed quantum states are highly entropic states of imperfect knowledge (i.e., incomplete information) about a quantum system, while pure quantum states are states of perfect knowledge (i.e., complete information) with vanishing von Neumann entropy. In this paper, we propose an information geometric theoretical construct to describe and, to a certain extent, understand the complex behavior of evolutions of quantum systems in pure and mixed states. The comparative analysis is probabilistic in nature, it uses a complexity measure that relies on a temporal averaging procedure along with a long-time limit, and is limited to analyzing expected geodesic evolutions on the underlying manifolds. More specifically, we study the complexity of geodesic paths on the manifolds of single-qubit pure and mixed quantum states equipped with the Fubini-Study metric and the Sjoqvist metric,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMorphological variations and asymmetry
