Detecting emergent 1-form symmetries with quantum error correction
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2502.17572v1
- Date: Mon, 24 Feb 2025 19:00:14 GMT
- Title: Detecting emergent 1-form symmetries with quantum error correction
- Authors: Yu-Jie Liu, Wen-Tao Xu, Frank Pollmann, Michael Knap,
- Abstract summary: We propose a quantitative criterion for the existence of 1-form symmetries motivated by quantum error correction (QEC)<n>We analytically determine the regimes in which a 1-form symmetry emerges in product states on one- and two-dimensional lattices.<n>We show that once the 1-form symmetry is detected to exist, a topological quantum phase transitions characterized by the spontaneous breaking of the 1-form symmetry can be accurately detected.
- Score: 5.505688971481444
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: Higher-from symmetries act on sub-dimensional spatial manifolds of a quantum system and they can emerge as an exact symmetry at low energies even when they are explicitly broken at the microscopic level, making them difficult to characterize. In this work, we propose a quantitative criterion for the existence of 1-form symmetries motivated by quantum error correction (QEC). We show that the loss of the emergent 1-form symmetry is an information-theoretic transition revealed from the ensemble of post-measurement states. We analytically determine the regimes in which a 1-form symmetry emerges in product states on one- and two-dimensional lattices. The latter can be solved by mapping the ensemble of post-measurement states to the partition sum of a random bond Ising model along the Nishimori line. In analytically intractable regimes, we demonstrate how to detect 1-form symmetries with a global Minimal-Weight Perfect Matching (MWPM) decoder and numerically examine the information-theoretic transition of the 1-form symmetry, including systems with $\mathbb{Z}_2$ topological order. As an application of our protocol, we show that once the 1-form symmetry is detected to exist, a topological quantum phase transitions characterized by the spontaneous breaking of the 1-form symmetry can be accurately detected by a disorder parameter. By exploiting ideas from quantum error correction, our work develops an information-theoretic criterion for emergent 1-from symmetries, which furthers our understanding of exotic symmetries and offers practical routes toward their characterization.
Related papers
- Observation of non-Hermitian bulk-boundary correspondence in non-chiral non-unitary quantum dynamics of single photons [31.05848822220465]
In non-Hermitian systems, preserved chiral symmetry is one of the key ingredients, which plays a pivotal role in determining non-Hermitian topology.
We theoretically predict and experimentally demonstrate the bulk-boundary correspondence of a one-dimensional (1D) non-Hermitian system with chiral symmetry breaking.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-04-07T09:43:43Z) - Topological response in open quantum systems with weak symmetries [0.0]
In open quantum systems, the interaction of the system with its environment gives rise to two types of symmetry.
We show that weak symmetries can protect topological responses that distinguish different phases of matter.
In particular, we show that the coupling to the environment can induce a phase transition to a state protected by weak symmetries.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-04-03T18:00:10Z) - Controlling Symmetries and Quantum Criticality in the Anisotropic Coupled-Top Model [32.553027955412986]
We investigate the anisotropic coupled-top model, which describes the interactions between two large spins along both $x-$ and $y-$directions.<n>We can manipulate the system's symmetry, inducing either discrete $Z$ or continuous U(1) symmetry.<n>The framework provides an ideal platform for experimentally controlling symmetries and investigating associated physical phenomena.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-02-13T15:14:29Z) - Predicting symmetries of quantum dynamics with optimal samples [41.42817348756889]
Identifying symmetries in quantum dynamics is a crucial challenge with profound implications for quantum technologies.<n>We introduce a unified framework combining group representation theory and subgroup hypothesis testing to predict these symmetries with optimal efficiency.<n>We prove that parallel strategies achieve the same performance as adaptive or indefinite-causal-order protocols.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-02-03T15:57:50Z) - Lattice T-duality from non-invertible symmetries in quantum spin chains [0.0]
We explore one of the simplest dualities, T-duality of the compact boson CFT, and its realization in quantum spin chains.<n>In the special case of the XX model, we uncover an exact lattice T-duality, which is associated with a non-invertible symmetry that exchanges two lattice U(1) symmetries.<n>We discuss how some of the anomalies in the CFT are nonetheless still exactly realized on the lattice and how the lattice U(1) symmetries enforce gaplessness.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-12-24T18:59:36Z) - Hilbert space geometry and quantum chaos [39.58317527488534]
We consider the symmetric part of the QGT for various multi-parametric random matrix Hamiltonians.
We find for a two-dimensional parameter space that, while the ergodic phase corresponds to the smooth manifold, the integrable limit marks itself as a singular geometry with a conical defect.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-11-18T19:00:17Z) - 1-Form Symmetric Projected Entangled-Pair States [10.248839649882179]
We study the role of 1-form symmetries in Projected Entangled-Pair States (PEPS)
Our results reveal that 1-form symmetries impose stringent constraints on tensor network representations, leading to distinct anomalous braiding phases carried by symmetry matrices.
We demonstrate how these symmetries influence the ground state and tangent space in PEPS, providing new insights into their physical implications.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-07-23T14:44:02Z) - Entanglement asymmetry and quantum Mpemba effect in two-dimensional free-fermion systems [0.0]
The quantum Mpemba effect is the counter-intuitive non-equilibrium phenomenon wherein the dynamic restoration of a broken symmetry occurs more rapidly when the initial state exhibits a higher degree of symmetry breaking.
Here we focus on a two-dimensional free-fermion lattice employing the entanglement asymmetry as a measure of symmetry breaking.
We find that the quantum Mpemba effect is strongly affected by the size of the system in the transverse dimension, with the potential to either enhance or spoil the phenomenon depending on the initial states.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-03-07T13:38:40Z) - Latent Space Symmetry Discovery [31.28537696897416]
We propose a novel generative model, Latent LieGAN, which can discover symmetries of nonlinear group actions.
We show that our model can express nonlinear symmetries under some conditions about the group action.
LaLiGAN also results in a well-structured latent space that is useful for downstream tasks including equation discovery and long-term forecasting.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-29T19:33:01Z) - Identifying the Group-Theoretic Structure of Machine-Learned Symmetries [41.56233403862961]
We propose methods for examining and identifying the group-theoretic structure of such machine-learned symmetries.
As an application to particle physics, we demonstrate the identification of the residual symmetries after the spontaneous breaking of non-Abelian gauge symmetries.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-14T17:03:50Z) - On discrete symmetries of robotics systems: A group-theoretic and
data-driven analysis [38.92081817503126]
We study discrete morphological symmetries of dynamical systems.
These symmetries arise from the presence of one or more planes/axis of symmetry in the system's morphology.
We exploit these symmetries using data augmentation and $G$-equivariant neural networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-02-21T04:10:16Z) - Quantum Error Mitigation using Symmetry Expansion [0.0]
Noise remains the biggest challenge for the practical applications of any near-term quantum devices.
We develop a general framework named symmetry expansion which provides a wide spectrum of symmetry-based error mitigation schemes.
We show that certain symmetry expansion schemes can achieve a smaller estimation bias than symmetry verification.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-01-08T18:30:48Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.