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Quantum Matter Seminar

Tuesday, May 16, 2023
12:00pm to 1:00pm
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East Bridge 114
How hard will it be to simulate quantum hydrodynamics?
Christopher D White, QuICS, University of Maryland,

Simulating dynamics of strongly interacting systems is a core challenge of quantum many-body physics. At high temperature, generic strongly interacting spin systems are expected to display hydrodynamics: local transport of conserved quantities, governed by classical partial differential equations like the diffusion equation. I argue that the emergence of hydrodynamics is explained certain properties of the system's Heisenberg dynamics, and that these properties lead to an effective model that is tractable in 1+1d and potentially 2+1d, but not in 3 dimensions or for gauge theories. I then turn to the prospects for simulation on error-corrected quantum computers, where resource costs will likely be dominated by non-Clifford gate counts. I present suggestive evidence that simulating hydrodynamics requires relatively small non-Clifford resources, or "magic". I then discuss a phase transition in magic induced by measurements, which may be useful as a first stage of magic-state distillation.