Phase transitions in (2 + 1)D subsystem-symmetric monitored quantum circuits
Cole Kelson-Packer, Akimasa Miyake

TL;DR
This paper explores phase transitions in (2+1)D monitored quantum circuits with subsystem symmetry, revealing how symmetry levels influence entanglement phases and critical exponents, with implications for quantum computation.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed study of measurement-induced phase transitions in subsystem-symmetric circuits, highlighting the impact of symmetry on critical behavior and entanglement structures.
Findings
Identifies two area-law and one volume-law phases with distinct entanglement.
Finds that the correlation length exponent varies significantly with symmetry constraints.
Subsystem-symmetric circuits exhibit a notably smaller critical exponent $ u \
Abstract
The interplay of unitary evolution and projective measurements is a modern interest in the study of many-body entanglement. On the one hand, the competition between these two processes leads to the recently discovered measurement-induced phase transition (MIPT). On the other hand, measurement-based quantum computation (MBQC) is a well-known computational paradigm where measurements simulate unitary evolution by utilizing the entanglement of special resources such as the two-dimensional (2D) cluster state. The entanglement properties enabling MBQC may be attributed to symmetry-protected topological (SPT) orders, particularly subsystem-symmetric topological (SSPT) orders. It was recently found that the one-dimensional cluster state may be associated with an SPT phase in random circuits respecting a global symmetry, and furthermore that all phase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
