Unscrambling Quantum Information with Clifford Decoders

Quantum information scrambling is a unitary process that destroys local correlations and spreads information throughout the system, effectively hiding it in nonlocal degrees of freedom. In principle, unscrambling this information is possible with perfect knowledge of the unitary dynamics [B. Yoshida...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysical review letters Vol. 132; no. 8; p. 080402
Main Authors Oliviero, Salvatore F E, Leone, Lorenzo, Lloyd, Seth, Hamma, Alioscia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 23.02.2024
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Summary:Quantum information scrambling is a unitary process that destroys local correlations and spreads information throughout the system, effectively hiding it in nonlocal degrees of freedom. In principle, unscrambling this information is possible with perfect knowledge of the unitary dynamics [B. Yoshida and A. Kitaev, arXiv:1710.03363.]. However, this Letter demonstrates that even without previous knowledge of the internal dynamics, information can be efficiently decoded from an unknown scrambler by monitoring the outgoing information of a local subsystem. We show that rapidly mixing but not fully chaotic scramblers can be decoded using Clifford decoders. The essential properties of a scrambling unitary can be efficiently recovered, even if the process is exponentially complex. Specifically, we establish that a unitary operator composed of t non-Clifford gates admits a Clifford decoder up to t≤n.
ISSN:1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.080402