Many-Body Anti-Zeno Thermalization and Zeno Determinism in Monitored Hamiltonian Dynamics
Jia-Jin Feng, Quntao Zhuang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a resource-efficient method for generating random quantum states using holographic deep thermalization with mid-circuit measurements, demonstrating anti-Zeno and Zeno effects in monitored Hamiltonian dynamics.
Contribution
It proposes a novel scheme combining Hamiltonian evolution and mid-circuit measurements to produce random states with a small bath, supported by theoretical and experimental analysis.
Findings
Exponential decrease in frame potential with increasing measurements initially
Observation of anti-Zeno behavior in thermalization process
Transition to Zeno effect after a critical number of measurements
Abstract
Random quantum states are essential for quantum information science, with applications ranging from quantum computing to cryptography. Prior approaches for generating these states often rely on using a large bath to thermalize a smaller system, with a subsequent measurement on the bath used to post-select a random state. To reduce the required size of the bath, we propose a resource-efficient scheme using holographic deep thermalization driven by Hamiltonian evolution, combined with mid-circuit measurements. This scheme relies on dynamical circuits, enabling a trade-off between spatial and temporal resources and allowing the generation of genuinely random states with only a constant-size bath. We quantify the randomness using the frame potential and derive its asymptotic behavior, which shows good agreement with our numerical simulations and experimental results on IBM quantum devices.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
