Quantum speed limit for the OTOC from an open systems perspective
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Scrambling, the delocalization of initially localized quantum information, is commonly characterized by the out-of-time ordered correlator (OTOC). Employing the OTOC-Renyi-2 entropy theorem we derive a quantum speed limit for the OTOC, which sets an lower bound for the rate with which information can be scrambled. This bound becomes particularly tractable by describing the scrambling of information in a closed quantum system as an effective decoherence process of an open system interacting with an environment. We prove that decay of the OTOC can be bounded by the strength of the system-environment coupling and two-point environmental correlation functions. We validate our analytic bound numerically using the non-integrable transverse field Ising model. Our results provide a universal and model-agnostic quantitative framework for understanding the dynamical limits of information spreading across quantum many-body physics, condensed matter, and engineered quantum platforms.
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Quantum speed limits based on Jensen-Shannon and Jeffreys divergences for general physical processes
Derives QSLs based on square roots of Jensen-Shannon and Jeffreys divergences, expressed via Schatten speed and eigenvalue cost functions, for general quantum processes including unitary evolution and specific open channels.
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