Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure of local information spreading for a stochastic cellular automaton in the form of a spatiotemporally resolved Hamming distance. This decorrelator is a classical version of an out-of-time-order correlator studied in the context of quantum many-body systems. Focusing on the one-dimensional Kauffman cellular automaton, we extract the scaling form of our decorrelator with an associated butterfly velocity vb and a velocity-dependent Lyapunov exponent λ(v). The existence of the latter is not a given in a discrete classical system. Second, we account for the behavior of the decorrelator in a framework based solely on the boundary of the information s...
The spread and scrambling of quantum information is a topic of considerable current interest. Numero...
In this article we study integrable quantum cellular automata (QHCG) with an arbitrary local Hilbert...
A closed quantum system never forgets its initial state, but the encoded information can get scrambl...
Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure o...
Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure o...
Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure o...
We find that the effects of a localized perturbation in a chaotic classical many-body system-the cla...
Random quantum circuits yield minimally structured models for chaotic quantum dynamics, which are ab...
Random quantum circuits yield minimally structured models for chaotic quantum dynamics, which are ab...
Out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs) describe information scrambling under unitary time evolution...
We study the chaotic dynamics in a classical many-body system of interacting spins on the kagome lat...
Out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs) describe information scrambling under unitary time evolution...
We study the spatial spread of out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs) in coupled map lattices (CMLs...
We study real-time local correlators $\langle\mathcal{O}(\mathbf{x},t)\mathcal{O}(0,0)\rangle$ in ch...
We study two classes of quantum phenomena associated with classical chaos in a variety of quantum mo...
The spread and scrambling of quantum information is a topic of considerable current interest. Numero...
In this article we study integrable quantum cellular automata (QHCG) with an arbitrary local Hilbert...
A closed quantum system never forgets its initial state, but the encoded information can get scrambl...
Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure o...
Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure o...
Inspired by recent developments in the study of chaos in many-body systems, we construct a measure o...
We find that the effects of a localized perturbation in a chaotic classical many-body system-the cla...
Random quantum circuits yield minimally structured models for chaotic quantum dynamics, which are ab...
Random quantum circuits yield minimally structured models for chaotic quantum dynamics, which are ab...
Out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs) describe information scrambling under unitary time evolution...
We study the chaotic dynamics in a classical many-body system of interacting spins on the kagome lat...
Out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs) describe information scrambling under unitary time evolution...
We study the spatial spread of out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs) in coupled map lattices (CMLs...
We study real-time local correlators $\langle\mathcal{O}(\mathbf{x},t)\mathcal{O}(0,0)\rangle$ in ch...
We study two classes of quantum phenomena associated with classical chaos in a variety of quantum mo...
The spread and scrambling of quantum information is a topic of considerable current interest. Numero...
In this article we study integrable quantum cellular automata (QHCG) with an arbitrary local Hilbert...
A closed quantum system never forgets its initial state, but the encoded information can get scrambl...