Random unitaries in extremely low depth
California Institute of Technology · Google (United States) · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Random unitaries are central to quantum technologies and the study of complex quantum many-body physics. However, existing protocols for generating random unitaries require long evolution times and deep circuits. In this work, we prove that local quantum circuits can form random unitaries in extremely low depth on any geometry. These shallow circuits have low complexity and create only short-range correlations, yet are indistinguishable from random unitaries with exponential complexity. This finding contrasts sharply with classical systems, in which a long evolution time is required to appear random. Our results have widespread applications across quantum science, from device benchmarking to quantum…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 80.53
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 125
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Quantum
- Computer science
- Electronic circuit
- Statistical physics
- Range (aeronautics)
- Algorithm
- Theoretical computer science
- Physics