@article {2252, title = {Verified Quantum Information Scrambling}, year = {2018}, abstract = {

Quantum scrambling is the dispersal of local information into many-body quantum entanglements and correlations distributed throughout the entire system. This concept underlies the dynamics of thermalization in closed quantum systems, and more recently has emerged as a powerful tool for characterizing chaos in black holes. However, the direct experimental measurement of quantum scrambling is difficult, owing to the exponential complexity of ergodic many-body entangled states. One way to characterize quantum scrambling is to measure an out-of-time-ordered correlation function (OTOC); however, since scrambling leads to their decay, OTOCs do not generally discriminate between quantum scrambling and ordinary decoherence. Here, we implement a quantum circuit that provides a positive test for the scrambling features of a given unitary process. This approach conditionally teleports a quantum state through the circuit, providing an unambiguous litmus test for scrambling while projecting potential circuit errors into an ancillary observable. We engineer quantum scrambling processes through a tunable 3-qubit unitary operation as part of a 7-qubit circuit on an ion trap quantum computer. Measured teleportation fidelities are typically \∼80\%, and enable us to experimentally bound the scrambling-induced decay of the corresponding OTOC measurement.

}, url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/1806.02807}, author = {Kevin A. Landsman and Caroline Figgatt and Thomas Schuster and Norbert M. Linke and Beni Yoshida and Norman Y. Yao and Christopher Monroe} }