Opzioni
Entanglement and Quantum Complexity in Monitored Quantum Many-Body Systems
PAVIGLIANITI, ALESSIO
2025-09-15
Abstract
Out-of-equilibrium quantum many-body systems stand at the forefront of modern
theoretical physics, addressing fundamental questions on thermalization, transport,
and universal phenomena. These fields, already well established in condensed
matter, statistical physics, quantum optics, and quantum information theory, are
progressively gaining even greater relevance with the rapid development of quantum
technologies and simulation, which inherently operate in dynamical regimes.
In recent years, the traditional paradigm of unitary quantum evolution has been
expanded to include measurements, opening new directions in out-of-equilibrium
physics. At the core of these advances lie measurement-induced phase transitions
(MIPTs), which have emerged as a new class of dynamical critical phenomena characterizing the general behavior of monitored quantum dynamics. When external
monitoring intertwines with unitary evolution, many-body quantum correlations
change their structure, giving rise to distinct entanglement phases of matter. This
discovery has sparked enormous interest in MIPTs, leading to significant advances
in open quantum systems, entanglement theory, and more broadly quantum complexity.
Despite much progress, a full understanding of monitored many-body dynamics
is far from complete, leaving several open questions on the nature of MIPTs,
their experimental observability, and the possibilities offered by measurements to
enhance control over synthetic quantum matter. These issues persist due to the
intrinsic complexity of the problem and the lack of efficient tools to study it, mainly
caused by the stochastic character of monitored evolution. This thesis addresses
these challenges by expanding the investigation of measurement-induced phenomena
in new settings and introducing innovative probes of entanglement and manybody
quantum complexity for MIPTs. A core question we investigate is the role
of symmetries, non-ergodicity, and especially integrability in measurement-induced
criticality, which dramatically affect the non-equilibrium phases. We further explore
how these phenomena extend beyond bipartite quantum correlations to multipartite
entanglement and quantum non-stabilizerness, highlighting the non-trivial interplay
between measurements and complexity notions rooted in quantum information theory.
Finally, we focus on the compelling problem of decoherence, modeling how
noise spoils entanglement structures.
These findings, supported by advanced numerical simulations and theoretical
analysis, deepen the current understanding of entanglement, complexity, and integrability in monitored quantum many-body systems, offering new perspectives on
their rich behavior. In parallel, we address the experimental problem of dissipation
in MIPTs, which is of key relevance for practical implementations. We anticipate
the present investigation to foster future research on the nature of monitored dynamical
critical phenomena and, more broadly, the applications of measurements in
quantum state evolution.
Diritti
open access
license:non specificato
license uri:na