Physical Review X

“Quantum and Classical Dynamics with Random Permutation Circuits”

28. Januar 2025

Understanding thermalization in quantum many-body systems is among the most enduring problems in modern physics. A particularly interesting question concerns the role played by quantum mechanics in this process, i.e., whether thermalization in quantum many-body systems is fundamentally different from that in classical many-body systems and, if so, which of its features are genuinely quantum. Here, we study this question in minimally structured many-body systems that are only constrained to have local interactions, i.e., local random circuits. In particular, we introduce random permutation circuits (RPCs), which are circuits comprising gates that locally permute basis states, as a counterpart to random unitary circuits (RUCs), a standard toy model for generic quantum dynamics. RPCs represent a model for generic microscopic classical reversible dynamics but, interestingly, can be interpreted both as classical or as quantum dynamics. We show that, upon averaging over all circuit realizations, RPCs permit the analytical computation of several key quantities such as out-of-time-order correlators (OTOCs) and entanglement entropies. In the classical setting, we obtain similar exact results relating (quantum) purity to (classical) growth of mutual information and (quantum) OTOCs to (classical) decorrelators. We, thus, discover a series of exact relations, connecting quantities in RUC and (quantum or classical) RPCs. Our results indicate that, despite the fundamental differences between quantum and classical systems, their many-body dynamics exhibits remarkably similar behaviors.

Access to paper: https://journals.aps.org/prx/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevX.15.011015

Weitere interessante Beiträge

Zur Redakteursansicht