Quantum Information Scrambling, Chaos, Sensitivity, and Emergent State Designs
Naga Dileep Varikuti

TL;DR
This paper explores quantum chaos through OTOCs, quantum Fisher information, and state designs, revealing how chaos influences quantum sensing and the emergence of complex quantum states.
Contribution
It introduces new insights into the role of symmetries in quantum state design emergence and applies OTOC analysis to non-KAM systems for quantum sensing.
Findings
Enhanced QFI scaling at resonances improves quantum sensing.
OTOCs reveal dynamical sensitivity in non-KAM quantum systems.
Symmetries significantly influence the formation of quantum state designs.
Abstract
Understanding quantum chaos is of profound theoretical interest and carries significant implications for various applications, from condensed matter physics to quantum error correction. Recently, out-of-time ordered correlators (OTOCs) have emerged as a powerful tool to quantify quantum chaos. For a given quantum system, the OTOCs measure incompatibility between an operator evolved in the Heisenberg picture and an unevolved operator. In the first part of this thesis, we employ OTOCs to study the dynamical sensitivity of a perturbed non-Komogorov-Arnold-Moser (non-KAM) system in the quantum limit as the parameter that characterizes the condition is slowly varied. For this purpose, we consider a quantized kicked harmonic oscillator (KHO) model that displays stochastic webs in the phase space. The OTOC analysis is followed by a study of quantum Fisher information (QFI)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
