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Published June 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Hierarchy of Topological Order From Finite-Depth Unitaries, Measurement, and Feedforward

Abstract

Long-range entanglement—the backbone of topologically ordered states—cannot be created in finite time using local unitary circuits, or, equivalently, adiabatic state preparation. Recently, it has come to light that single-site measurements provide a loophole, allowing for finite-time state preparation in certain cases. Here we show how this observation imposes a complexity hierarchy on long-range entangled states based on the minimal number of measurement layers required to create the state, which we call "shots." First, similar to Abelian stabilizer states, we construct single-shot protocols for creating any non-Abelian quantum double of a group with nilpotency class 2 (such as D₄ or Q₈). We show that after the measurement, the wave function always collapses into the desired non-Abelian topological order, conditional on recording the measurement outcome. Moreover, the clean quantum double ground state can be deterministically prepared via feedforward—gates that depend on the measurement outcomes. Second, we provide the first constructive proof that a finite number of shots can implement the Kramers-Wannier duality transformation (i.e., the gauging map) for any solvable symmetry group. As a special case, this gives an explicit protocol to prepare twisted quantum doubles for all solvable groups. Third, we argue that certain topological orders, such as nonsolvable quantum doubles or Fibonacci anyons, define nontrivial phases of matter under the equivalence class of finite-depth unitaries and measurement, which cannot be prepared by any finite number of shots. Moreover, we explore the consequences of allowing gates to have exponentially small tails, which enables, for example, the preparation of any Abelian anyon theory, including chiral ones. This hierarchy paints a new picture of the landscape of long-range entangled states, with practical implications for quantum simulators.

Additional Information

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI. The authors thank Ryan Thorngren for collaboration on a related project [16]. N.T. and R.V. thank Aaron Friedman, Andy Lucas, and Drew Potter for illuminating discussions. N.T. thanks Wenjie Ji for helpful discussions on Rep(G) symmetry and Julia Plavnik for helpful discussions on nilpotent and solvable categories. N.T. is supported by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at Caltech. R.V. is supported by the Harvard Quantum Initiative Postdoctoral Fellowship in Science and Engineering, and R.V. and A.V. by the Simons Collaboration on Ultra-Quantum Matter, which is a grant from the Simons Foundation (651440, A.V.).

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023