Observable Measurement-Induced Transitions
Aleksei Khindanov, Igor L. Aleiner, Lara Faoro, Lev B. Ioffe

TL;DR
This paper identifies a new measurement-induced phase transition in quantum systems that can be experimentally observed through reversibility of quantum dynamics, contrasting with previous transitions requiring complex tomography.
Contribution
It introduces a novel measurement-induced phase transition observable via quantum reversibility, supported by numerical and analytical evidence.
Findings
Transition characterized by recovery or loss of quantum information
Probability of measurement outcomes changes from exponential decay to constant
Numerical simulations confirm the phase transition
Abstract
One of the main postulates of quantum mechanics is that measurements destroy quantum coherence (wave function collapse). Recently it was discovered that in a many-body system dilute local measurements still preserve some coherence across the entire system. As the measurement density is increased, a phase transition occurs that is characterized by the disentanglement of different parts of the system. Unfortunately, this transition is impossible to observe experimentally for macroscopic systems because it requires an exponentially costly full tomography of the many-body wave function or a comparison with the simulation on an oracle classical computer. In this work we report the discovery of another measurement-induced phase transition that can be observed experimentally if quantum dynamics can be reversed. On one side of this phase transition the quantum information encoded in some part…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Measurement and Uncertainty Evaluation
