16–20 Jun 2025
Europe/Budapest timezone

Long-range nonstabilizerness and phases of matter

Not scheduled
2h
Eötvös Room, Northern Building

Eötvös Room, Northern Building

Eötvös Lorand University, Faculty of Science, Budapest Pázmány Péter stny. 1/A, 1117
Poster Poster

Speaker

David Korbany (University of Bologna)

Description

In this talk, we will discuss [arxiv:2502.19504]: Long-range nonstabilizerness can be defined as the amount of nonstabilizerness which cannot be removed by shallow local quantum circuits (QCs). We study long-range nonstabilizerness in the context of many-body quantum physics, a task with possible implications for quantum-state preparation protocols and implementation of quantum-error correcting codes. After presenting a simple argument showing that long-range nonstabilizerness is a generic property of many-body states, we restrict to the class of ground states of gapped local Hamiltonians. We focus on one dimensional systems and present rigorous results in the context of translation-invariant matrix product states (MPSs). By analyzing the fixed points of the MPS renormalization-group flow, we provide a sufficient condition for long-range nonstabilizerness, which depends entirely on the local MPS tensors. Physically, our condition captures the fact that the mutual information between distant regions of stabilizer fixed points is quantized, and this fact is not changed after applying shallow quantum circuits. We also discuss possible ramifications in the classification of phases of matter and quantum error correction. An introduction to the mathematical tools, stabilizer states, MPS fixed points, shallow QCs and phases of matter, will be provided.

Author

David Korbany (University of Bologna)

Co-authors

Prof. Lorenzo Piroli (University of Bologna) Prof. Michael Gullans (Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science, University of Maryland and NIST)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.