realm
Evolving quantum processes backwards on a quantum computer to damage information in the simulated past causes little change when returned to the 'present'
Date:
July 29, 2020
Source:
DOE/Los Alamos National Laboratory
Summary:
Using a quantum computer to simulate time travel, researchers
have demonstrated that, in the quantum realm, there is no
'butterfly effect.' In the research, information--qubits, or
quantum bits--'time travel' into the simulated past.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Using a quantum computer to simulate time travel, researchers have
demonstrated that, in the quantum realm, there is no "butterfly
effect." In the research, information -- qubits, or quantum bits -- "time travel" into the simulated past. One of them is then strongly damaged,
like stepping on a butterfly, metaphorically speaking. Surprisingly,
when all qubits return to the "present," they appear largely unaltered,
as if reality is self-healing.
==========================================================================
"On a quantum computer, there is no problem simulating opposite-in-time evolution, or simulating running a process backwards into the past,"
said Nikolai Sinitsyn, a theoretical physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and coauthor of the paper with Bin Yan, a post doc in the
Center for Nonlinear Studies, also at Los Alamos. "So we can actually
see what happens with a complex quantum world if we travel back in time,
add small damage, and return.
We found that our world survives, which means there's no butterfly effect
in quantum mechanics." In Ray Bradbury's 1952 science fiction story, "A
Sound of Thunder," a character used a time machine to travel to the deep
past, where he stepped on a butterfly. Upon returning to the present time,
he found a different world. This story is often credited with coining the
term "butterfly effect," which refers to the extremely high sensitivity
of a complex, dynamic system to its initial conditions. In such a system, early, small factors go on to strongly influence the evolution of the
entire system.
Instead, Yan and Sinitsyn found that simulating a return to the past
to cause small local damage in a quantum system leads to only small, insignificant local damage in the present.
This effect has potential applications in information-hiding hardware
and testing quantum information devices. Information can be hidden by
a computer by converting the initial state into a strongly entangled one.
"We found that even if an intruder performs state-damaging measurements
on the strongly entangled state, we still can easily recover the useful information because this damage is not magnified by a decoding process,"
Yan said. "This justifies talks about creating quantum hardware that
will be used to hide information." This new finding could also be used
to test whether a quantum processor is, in fact, working by quantum
principles. Since the newfound no-butterfly effect is purely quantum,
if a processor runs Yan and Sinitsyn's system and shows this effect,
then it must be a quantum processor.
==========================================================================
To test the butterfly effect in quantum systems, Yan and Sinitsyn used
theory and simulations with the IBM-Q quantum processor to show how a
circuit could evolve a complex system by applying quantum gates, with
forwards and backwards cause and effect.
Presto, a quantum time-machine simulator.
In the team's experiment, Alice, a favorite stand-in agent used for
quantum thought experiments, prepares one of her qubits in the present
time and runs it backwards through the quantum computer. In the deep
past, an intruder -- Bob, another favorite stand-in -- meaures Alice's
qubit. This action disturbs the qubit and destroys all its quantum
correlations with the rest of the world.
Next, the system is run forward to the present time.
According to Ray Bradbury, Bob's small damage to the state and all those correlations in the past should be quickly magnified during the complex forward-in-time evolution. Hence, Alice should be unable to recover her information at the end.
But that's not what happened. Yan and Sinitsyn found that most of the
presently local information was hidden in the deep past in the form of essentially quantum correlations that could not be damaged by minor
tampering. They showed that the information returns to Alice's qubit
without much damage despite Bob's interference. Counterintuitively,
for deeper travels to the past and for bigger "worlds," Alice's final information returns to her even less damaged.
"We found that the notion of chaos in classical physics and in quantum mechanics must be understood differently," Sinitsyn said.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
DOE/Los_Alamos_National_Laboratory. Note: Content may be edited for
style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Bin Yan, Nikolai A. Sinitsyn. Recovery of Damaged Information
and the
Out-of-Time-Ordered Correlators. Physical Review Letters, 2020;
125 (4) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.040605 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200729114750.htm
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