Lecture Notes on Information Scrambling, Quantum Chaos, and Haar-Random States
Marcin P{\l}odzie\'n

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of information scrambling and quantum chaos, emphasizing the universal spectral properties of Haar-random states and their applications in quantum computing and device benchmarking.
Contribution
It develops a geometric, model-independent framework for understanding entanglement and spectral statistics in quantum chaos using random matrix theory and unitary designs.
Findings
Universal spectral predictions for Haar-random states
Diagnostic tools for chaos like spectral form factor and OTOCs
Application of random circuits in quantum device benchmarking
Abstract
Information scrambling, the process by which quantum information spreads and becomes effectively inaccessible, is central to modern quantum statistical physics and quantum chaos. These lecture notes provide an introduction to information scrambling from both static and dynamical perspectives. The spectral properties of reduced density matrices arising from Haar-random states are developed through the geometry of the unitary group and the universal results of random matrix theory. This geometric framework yields universal, model-independent predictions for entanglement and spectral statistics, capturing generic features of quantum chaos without reference to microscopic details. Dynamical diagnostics such as the spectral form factor and out-of-time-ordered correlators further reveal the onset of chaos in time-dependent evolution. The notes are aimed at advanced undergraduate and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography
