Highly complex novel critical behavior from the intrinsic randomness of quantum mechanical measurements on critical ground states -- a controlled renormalization group analysis
Rushikesh A. Patil, Andreas W. W. Ludwig

TL;DR
This paper investigates how weak quantum measurements induce complex, multifractal critical behavior in one-dimensional quantum Ising models, revealing new universal scaling laws and fixed points through a controlled renormalization group analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a controlled RG framework to analyze measurement-induced criticality, uncovering multifractal scaling, logarithmic correlations, and universal entropy measures in measured quantum ground states.
Findings
Multifractal scaling of correlations with infinite critical exponents
Logarithmic factors in correlation functions indicating logarithmic CFT behavior
Universal effective central charges and boundary entropy related to measurement records
Abstract
We consider the effects of weak measurements on the quantum critical ground state of the one-dimensional (a) tricritical and (b) critical quantum Ising model, by measuring in (a) the local energy and in (b) the local spin operator in a lattice formulation. By employing a controlled renormalization group (RG) analysis we find that each problem exhibits highly complex novel scaling behavior, arising from the intrinsically indeterministic ('random') nature of quantum mechanical measurements, which is governed by a measurement-dominated RG fixed point that we study within an expansion. In the tricritical Ising case (a) we find (i): multifractal scaling behavior of energy and spin correlations in the measured groundstate, corresponding to an infinite hierarchy of independent critical exponents and, equivalently, to a continuum of universal scaling exponents for each of these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Theoretical and Computational Physics
