Published February 13, 2025 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Classifying One-Dimensional Quantum States Prepared by a Single Round of Measurements

  • 1. Harvard University
  • 2. University of Chicago

Description

Measurements and feedback have emerged as powerful resources for creating many-body quantum states. However, a detailed understanding has been restricted to fixed-point representatives of phases of matter. Here, we go beyond this and characterize the patterns of many-body entanglement that can be deterministically created from measurement. Focusing on one spatial dimension, a framework is developed for the case where a single round of measurements is the only entangling operation. We show this creates matrix-product states and identify necessary and sufficient tensor conditions for preparability, which uniquely determine the preparation protocol. We use these conditions to both classify preparable quantum states and characterize their physical constraints. In particular, we find a trade-off between the richness of the preparable entanglement spectrum and correlation functions, which leads to a no-go theorem for preparing certain quantum states. More broadly, we connect properties of the preparation protocol to the resulting phase of matter, including trivial, symmetry-breaking, and symmetry-protected topological phases—for both uniform and modulated symmetries. This work offers a resource-theoretic perspective on preparable quantum entanglement and shows how to systematically create states of matter, away from their fixed points, in quantum devices.

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PRXQuantum.6.010329.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1103/PRXQuantum.6.010329
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:14676

Funding

U.S. Department of Energy
DESC0022158
Simons Foundation
618615
DARPA

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering