Boundary transitions from a single round of measurements on gapless quantum states
Yue Liu, Sara Murciano, David F. Mross, Jason Alicea

TL;DR
This paper explores how a single measurement on gapless quantum states can induce boundary phase transitions, revealing new universal behaviors and connections to conformal field theories.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of measurement-induced boundary transitions in gapless quantum systems and develops a theoretical framework for understanding these phenomena.
Findings
Measurement basis rotation induces boundary phase transitions.
Long-range order can coexist with power-law correlations after measurement.
Critical angles mark transitions between different boundary regimes.
Abstract
Measurements can qualitatively alter correlations and entanglement emerging in gapless quantum matter. We show how a single round of measurements on gapless quantum systems can, upon rotating the measurement basis, induce non-trivial transitions separating regimes displaying universal characteristics governed by distinct boundary conformal field theories. We develop the theory of such `measurement-induced boundary transitions' by investigating a gapless parent of the one-dimensional cluster state, obtained by appropriately symmetrizing a commuting projector Hamiltonian for the latter. Projective measurements on the cluster state are known to convert the wavefunction, after post-selection or decoding, into a long-range-ordered Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) state. Similar measurements applied to the gapless parent (i) generate long-range order coexisting with power-law correlations…
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