English

State complexity and phase identification in adaptive quantum circuits

Quantum Physics 2025-09-23 v1

Abstract

Adaptive quantum circuits, leveraging measurements and classical feedback, significantly expand the landscape of realizable quantum states compared to their non-adaptive counterparts, enabling the preparation of long-range entangled states and topological phases at constant depths. However, the ancilla overhead for preparing arbitrary states can be prohibitive, raising a fundamental question: which states can be efficiently realized with limited ancilla and low depth? Addressing this question requires a rigorous quantitative characterization of state complexity, or the minimum depth and ancillas, to realize a state in adaptive circuits. In this work, we tackle this problem by introducing two properties of quantum states: state weight and anti-shallowness, connected to the correlation range and correlation strength within a state, respectively. We prove that these quantities are bounded under limited circuit resources, thereby providing rigorous bounds on the approximate complexity of state preparation and gate implementation. Illustrative examples include the GHZ state, W state, QLDPC code states, and the Toffoli gate. Besides complexity, we show that states within the same quantum phase, defined by a set of quantum states connected with constant-depth circuits, must share the same scaling of weight or anti-shallowness. This establishes these quantities as indicators of quantum phases and their essential roles in many-body physics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2509.17014,
  title  = {State complexity and phase identification in adaptive quantum circuits},
  author = {Guoding Liu and Junjie Chen and Xiongfeng Ma},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.17014},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

35 pages, 10 figures. Comments are welcome!

R2 v1 2026-07-01T05:48:10.131Z