Complexity of Quantum-Mechanical Evolutions from Probability Amplitudes
Carlo Cafaro, Leonardo Rossetti, Paul M. Alsing

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complexity of quantum state evolutions on the Bloch sphere, introducing new measures and comparing their behavior to geometric and efficiency metrics, revealing that complexity depends on path length and curvature.
Contribution
It proposes a novel definition of quantum evolution complexity and a complexity length scale, connecting geometric properties with physical significance in quantum dynamics.
Findings
Efficient quantum evolutions are generally less complex.
Longer, more bent paths can be less complex than shorter, less curved ones.
Complexity exceeds simple path length, involving curvature effects.
Abstract
We study the complexity of both time-optimal and time sub-optimal quantum Hamiltonian evolutions connecting arbitrary source and a target states on the Bloch sphere equipped with the Fubini-Study metric. This investigation is performed in a number of steps. First, we describe each unitary Schr\"odinger quantum evolution by means of the path length, the geodesic efficiency, the speed efficiency, and the curvature coefficient of its corresponding dynamical trajectory linking the source state to the target state. Second, starting from a classical probabilistic setting where the so-called information geometric complexity can be employed to describe the complexity of entropic motion on curved statistical manifolds underlying the physics of systems when only partial knowledge about them is available, we transition into a deterministic quantum setting. In this context, after proposing a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum many-body systems · Statistical Mechanics and Entropy
