Quantum State Design and Emergent Confinement Mechanism in Measured Tensor Network States
Quantum State Design and Emergent Confinement Mechanism in Measured Tensor Network States
Randomness is a fundamental aspect of quantum mechanics, arising from the measurement process that collapses superpositions into definite outcomes according to Born's rule. Generating large-scale random quantum states is crucial for quantum computing and many-body physics, yet remains a key challenge. We present a practical method based on local measurements of random Tensor Networks, focusing on random Matrix Product States (MPS) generated by two distinct quantum circuit architectures, both feasible on near-term devices. We certify the emergent quantum randomness using the frame potential and establish a mapping between its behavior and the statistical mechanics of a domain wall particle model. In both architectures, the effect of quantum measurements induces a nontrivial confinement mechanism, where domain walls are either trapped by an external potential or bound in pairs to form meson-like excitations. Our results, supported by both exact analytical calculations and numerical simulations, suggest that confinement is a general mechanism underlying random state generation in broader settings with local measurements, including quantum circuits and chaotic dynamics.
Guglielmo Lami、Andrea De Luca、Xhek Turkeshi、Jacopo De Nardis
物理学
Guglielmo Lami,Andrea De Luca,Xhek Turkeshi,Jacopo De Nardis.Quantum State Design and Emergent Confinement Mechanism in Measured Tensor Network States[EB/OL].(2025-04-23)[2025-07-22].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.16995.点此复制
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