Quantum state randomization constrained by non-Abelian symmetries
Yuhan Wu, Joaquin F. Rodriguez-Nieva

TL;DR
This paper investigates how non-Abelian symmetries and experimental constraints on initial states limit the ability of quantum systems to generate Haar-like randomness during evolution, especially for unentangled initial states.
Contribution
It demonstrates that symmetry constraints and initial state limitations prevent full Haar-randomization in quantum dynamics, with implications for quantum information processing.
Findings
Late-time states remain distinguishable from Haar-random states due to initial state constraints.
Unentangled initial states cannot satisfy the conditions for maximal Haar-like randomness.
The maximal entanglement entropy achievable is quantified under symmetry and experimental constraints.
Abstract
The emergence of randomness from unitary quantum dynamics is a central problem across diverse disciplines, ranging from the foundations of statistical mechanics to quantum algorithms and quantum computation. Physical systems are invariably subject to constraints -- from simple scalar symmetries to more complex non-Abelian ones -- that restrict the accessible regions of Hilbert space and obstruct the generation of pure random states. In this work, we show that for systems with noncommuting symmetries such as SU(2), the degree of Haar-like randomization achievable under unitary dynamics is strongly constrained by experimental limitations on state initialization, in particular low-entanglement initial states, rather than by the symmetry-constrained dynamics themselves. Specifically, we show that time-evolved states can, in principle, reproduce Haar-like behavior at the level of finite…
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