Noise-induced Simulability Transition from Operator Scrambling
Neil Dowling, Xhek Turkeshi, Jacopo De Nardis, Guglielmo Lami

TL;DR
This paper investigates how noise affects the complexity of simulating quantum many-body dynamics, revealing a transition point where classical simulation becomes feasible due to operator sparsity.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to analyze the Pauli spectrum of random quantum circuits under noise, identifying a noise-induced transition in simulability.
Findings
Low moments of the Pauli spectrum equilibrate quickly in noiseless circuits.
Above a critical noise level, operators remain sparse and classically simulable.
Below the critical noise, classical simulation remains exponentially hard.
Abstract
The complexity of simulating quantum many-body dynamics, or quantum computations, in the Heisenberg picture is governed by the scrambling of initially simple operators into superpositions of exponentially many Pauli strings. The corresponding expansion coefficients define the Pauli spectrum, whose structure controls the performance of classical algorithms based on truncating Pauli expansions. Here we determine the finite-depth Pauli spectrum of random quantum circuits, both in the noiseless case and in the presence of local noise, through its moments, given by the operator stabilizer R\'enyi entropies. In noiseless circuits, we uncover a hierarchy in the approach to the fully scrambled regime: low moments equilibrate at relatively short depths, while higher moments, which are sensitive to rare, large-amplitude Pauli coefficients, require parametrically larger depths. In noisy circuits,…
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