Quantum Criticality Under Decoherence or Weak Measurement

Decoherence inevitably happens when a quantum state is exposed to its environment, which can affect quantum critical points (QCPs) in a nontrivial way. As was pointed out in the recent literature on (1+1)d conformal field theory (CFT) [Garratt et al. Measurements conspire nonlocally to restructure c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jong Yeon Lee, Chao-Ming Jian, Cenke Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2023-08-01
Series:PRX Quantum
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PRXQuantum.4.030317
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Summary:Decoherence inevitably happens when a quantum state is exposed to its environment, which can affect quantum critical points (QCPs) in a nontrivial way. As was pointed out in the recent literature on (1+1)d conformal field theory (CFT) [Garratt et al. Measurements conspire nonlocally to restructure critical quantum states, arXiv:2207.09476 (2022)], the effect of weak measurement can be mathematically mapped to the problem of boundary CFT. In this work, we focus on the (2+1)d QCPs, whose boundary and defect effects have attracted enormous theoretical and numerical interests very recently. We focus on decoherence caused by weak measurements with and without postselecting the measurement outcomes. Our main results are as follows: (1) for an O(N) Wilson-Fisher QCP under weak measurement with postselection, an observer would, in general, observe two different types of boundary and defect criticality with very different behaviors from the well-known Wilson-Fisher fixed points; in particular, it is possible to observe the recently proposed exotic “extraordinary-log” correlation. (2) An extra quantum phase transition can be driven by decoherence, if we consider quantities nonlinear with the decohered density matrix, such as the Renyi entropy. We demonstrate the connection between this transition to the information-theoretic transition driven by an error in the toric code model. (3) When there is no postselection, though correlation functions between local operators remain the same as the undecohered pure state, nonlocal operators such as the “disorder operator” would have qualitatively distinct behaviors; and we also show that the decoherence can lead to confinement.
ISSN:2691-3399