| Literature DB >> 34709938 |
Xiao Mi1, Pedram Roushan1, Chris Quintana1, Salvatore Mandrà2,3, Jeffrey Marshall2,4, Charles Neill1, Frank Arute1, Kunal Arya1, Juan Atalaya1, Ryan Babbush1, Joseph C Bardin1,5, Rami Barends1, Joao Basso1, Andreas Bengtsson1, Sergio Boixo1, Alexandre Bourassa1,6, Michael Broughton1, Bob B Buckley1, David A Buell1, Brian Burkett1, Nicholas Bushnell1, Zijun Chen1, Benjamin Chiaro1, Roberto Collins1, William Courtney1, Sean Demura1, Alan R Derk1, Andrew Dunsworth1, Daniel Eppens1, Catherine Erickson1, Edward Farhi1, Austin G Fowler1, Brooks Foxen1, Craig Gidney1, Marissa Giustina1, Jonathan A Gross1, Matthew P Harrigan1, Sean D Harrington1, Jeremy Hilton1, Alan Ho1, Sabrina Hong1, Trent Huang1, William J Huggins1, L B Ioffe1, Sergei V Isakov1, Evan Jeffrey1, Zhang Jiang1, Cody Jones1, Dvir Kafri1, Julian Kelly1, Seon Kim1, Alexei Kitaev1,7, Paul V Klimov1, Alexander N Korotkov1,8, Fedor Kostritsa1, David Landhuis1, Pavel Laptev1, Erik Lucero1, Orion Martin1, Jarrod R McClean1, Trevor McCourt1, Matt McEwen1,9, Anthony Megrant1, Kevin C Miao1, Masoud Mohseni1, Shirin Montazeri1, Wojciech Mruczkiewicz1, Josh Mutus1, Ofer Naaman1, Matthew Neeley1, Michael Newman1, Murphy Yuezhen Niu1, Thomas E O'Brien1, Alex Opremcak1, Eric Ostby1, Balint Pato1, Andre Petukhov1, Nicholas Redd1, Nicholas C Rubin1, Daniel Sank1, Kevin J Satzinger1, Vladimir Shvarts1, Doug Strain1, Marco Szalay1, Matthew D Trevithick1, Benjamin Villalonga1, Theodore White1, Z Jamie Yao1, Ping Yeh1, Adam Zalcman1, Hartmut Neven1, Igor Aleiner1, Kostyantyn Kechedzhi1, Vadim Smelyanskiy1, Yu Chen1.
Abstract
Interactions in quantum systems can spread initially localized quantum information into the exponentially many degrees of freedom of the entire system. Understanding this process, known as quantum scrambling, is key to resolving several open questions in physics. Here, by measuring the time-dependent evolution and fluctuation of out-of-time-order correlators, we experimentally investigate the dynamics of quantum scrambling on a 53-qubit quantum processor. We engineer quantum circuits that distinguish operator spreading and operator entanglement and experimentally observe their respective signatures. We show that whereas operator spreading is captured by an efficient classical model, operator entanglement in idealized circuits requires exponentially scaled computational resources to simulate. These results open the path to studying complex and practically relevant physical observables with near-term quantum processors.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34709938 DOI: 10.1126/science.abg5029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728