Random Permutation Circuits Beyond Qubits are Quantum Chaotic
Bruno Bertini, Katja Klobas, Pavel Kos, Daniel Malz

TL;DR
This paper investigates the quantum chaotic behavior of random permutation circuits beyond qubits by analyzing local operator entanglement growth, revealing that higher local dimensions induce true quantum chaos.
Contribution
It demonstrates that local operator entanglement grows linearly in time for local dimensions greater than two, establishing a new criterion for quantum chaos beyond qubit systems.
Findings
LOE is bounded for qubit circuits, indicating non-chaotic behavior.
LOE grows linearly for local dimension q > 2, indicating quantum chaos.
LOE can be used as a universal chaos indicator in both quantum and classical systems.
Abstract
Random permutation circuits were recently introduced as minimal models for local many-body dynamics that can be interpreted both as classical and quantum. Standard dynamical complexity indicators such as damage spreading and out-of-time-order correlators (OTOCs), show that these systems exhibit sensitivity to initial conditions in the classical setting and operator scrambling in the quantum setting. Here, we address their quantum chaoticity - a stricter property - by studying the time evolution of local operator entanglement (LOE). We show that the behaviour of LOE in random permutation circuits depends on the dimension of the local configuration space q. When q = 2, i.e. the circuits act on qubits, random permutations are Clifford and the LOE of any local operator is bounded by a constant, indicating that they are not truly chaotic. On the other hand, when the dimension of the local…
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