DMRG Preprints

A small reader for Tomotoshi Nishino's selection of papers on tensor networks

Efficiency of classical simulations of a noisy Grover algorithm

Raphaël Menu, Johannes Schachenmayer

2602.17436 | Thu Feb 19 2026 | quant-ph | PDF

We analyze the modification of entanglement dynamics in the Grover algorithm when the qubits are subjected to single-qubit amplitude-damping or phase-flip noise. We compare quantum trajectories with full density-matrix simulations, analyzing the dynamics of averaged trajectory entanglement (TE) and operator entanglement (OE), in the respective state representation. Although not a genuine entanglement measure, both TE and OE are connected to the efficiency of matrix product state simulations and thus of fundamental interest. As in many quantum algorithms, at the end of the Grover circuit entanglement decreases as the system converges towards the target product state. While we find that this is well captured in the OE dynamics, quantum trajectories rarely follow paths of reducing entanglement. Optimized unraveling schemes can lower TE slightly, however we show that deep in the circuit OE is generally smaller than TE. This implies that matrix product density operator (MPDO) simulations of quantum circuits can in general be more efficient than quantum trajectories. In addition, we investigate the noise-rate scaling of success probabilities for both amplitude-damping and phase-flip noise in Grover's algorithm.

Matrix-product operator dualities in integrable lattice models

Yuan Miao, Andras Molnar, Nick G. Jones

2602.17158 | Thu Feb 19 2026 | cond-mat.stat-mech quant-ph | PDF

Matrix-product operators (MPOs) appear throughout the study of integrable lattice models, notably as the transfer matrices. They can also be used as transformations to construct dualities between such models, both invertible (including unitary) and non-invertible (including discrete gauging). We analyse how the local Yang--Baxter integrable structures are modified under such dualities. We see that the &hcedil;eck{R}-matrix, that appears in the baxterization approach to integrability, transforms in a simple manner. We further show for a broad class of MPOs that the usual Yang--Baxter RR-matrix satisfies a modified algebra, previously identified in the unitary case, that gives a local integrable structure underlying the commuting transfer matrices of the dual model. We illustrate these results with two case studies, analysing an invertible unitary MPO and a non-invertible MPO both applied to the canonical XXZ spin chain. The former is the cluster entangler, arising in the study of symmetry-protected topological phases, while the latter is the Kramers--Wannier duality. We show several results for MPOs with exact MPO inverses that are of independent interest.

Mott-insulating phases of the Bose-Hubbard model on quasi-1D ladder lattices

Lorenzo Carfora, Callum W. Duncan, Stefan Kuhr, Peter Kirton

2602.16770 | Thu Feb 19 2026 | cond-mat.quant-gas quant-ph | PDF

We calculate the phase diagram of the Bose-Hubbard model on a half-filled ladder lattice including the effect of finite on-site interactions. This shows that the rung-Mott insulator (RMI) phase persists to finite interaction strength, and we calculate the RMI-superfluid phase boundary in the thermodynamic limit. We show that the phases can still be distinguished using the number and parity variances, which are observables accessible in a quantum-gas microscope. Phases analogous to the RMI were found to exist in other quasi-1D lattice structures, with the lattice connectivity modifying the phase boundaries. This shows that the the presence of these phases is the result of states with one-dimensional structures being mapped onto higher dimensional systems, driven by the reduction of hopping rates along different directions.

Stochastic tensor contraction for quantum chemistry

Jiace Sun, Garnet Kin-Lic Chan

2602.17569 | Thu Feb 19 2026 | physics.chem-ph | PDF

Many computational methods in ab initio quantum chemistry are formulated in terms of high-order tensor contractions, whose cost determines the size of system that can be studied. We introduce stochastic tensor contraction to perform such operations with greatly reduced cost, and present its application to the gold-standard quantum chemistry method, coupled cluster theory with up to perturbative triples. For total energy errors more stringent than chemical accuracy, we reduce the computational scaling to that of mean-field theory, while starting to approach the mean-field absolute cost, thereby challenging the existing cost-to-accuracy landscape. Benchmarks against state-of-the-art local correlation approximations further show that we achieve an order-of-magnitude improvement in both total computation time and error, with significantly reduced sensitivity to system dimensionality and electron delocalization. We conclude that stochastic tensor contraction is a powerful computational primitive to accelerate a wide range of quantum chemistry.

Phase transitions in coupled Ising chains and SO(NN)-symmetric spin chains

Yohei Fuji, Sylvain Capponi, Lukas Devos, Philippe Lecheminant

2602.17029 | Thu Feb 19 2026 | cond-mat.str-el cond-mat.stat-mech | PDF

We investigate the nature of quantum phase transitions in a (1+1)-dimensional field theory composed of NN copies of the Ising conformal field theory interacting via competing relevant perturbations. The field theory governs the competition between a mass term and an interaction involving the product of NN order-parameter fields, which is realized, e.g. in coupled Ising chains, two-leg spin ladders, and SO(NN)-symmetric spin chains. By combining a perturbative renormalization group analysis and large-scale matrix-product state simulations, we systematically determine the nature of the phase transition as a function of NN. For N=2N=2 and N=3N=3, we confirm that the transition is continuous, belonging to the Ising and four-state Potts universality classes, respectively. In contrast, for N4N \ge 4, our results provide compelling evidence that the transition becomes first order. We further apply these findings to specific lattice models with SO(NN) symmetry, including spin-1/21/2 and spin-11 two-leg ladders, that realize a direct transition between an SO(NN) symmetry-protected topological phase and a trivial phase. Our results refine a recent conjecture regarding the criticality of transitions between SPT phases.

From Multipartite Entanglement to TQFT

Michele Del Zotto, Abhijit Gadde, Pavel Putrov

2602.17427 | Wed Feb 18 2026 | hep-th cond-mat.str-el math-ph math.QA quant-ph | PDF

At long distances, a gapped phase of matter is described by a topological quantum field theory (TQFT). We conjecture a tight and concrete relationship between the genuine (d+1)(d+1)-partite entanglement -- labelled by a dd-dimensional manifold MM -- in the ground state of a (d1)+1(d-1)+1-dimensional gapped theory and the partition function of the low energy TQFT on MM. In particular, the conjecture implies that for d=3d=3, the ground state wavefunction can determine the modular tensor category description of the low energy TQFT. We verify our conjecture for general (2+1)-dimensional Levin-Wen string-net models.

A Tale of Two Plateaus: Competing Orders in Spin-1 and Spin-32\tfrac{3}{2} Pyrochlore Magnets

Imre Hagymási

2602.15942 | Wed Feb 18 2026 | cond-mat.str-el | PDF

We use large-scale density-matrix renormalization group simulations with bond dimensions up to 20 00020\ 000 to determine the magnetization curves of spin-1 and spin-32\tfrac{3}{2} pyrochlore Heisenberg antiferromagnets. Both models exhibit a robust half-magnetization plateau, and we find that the same 16-site state (quadrupled unit cell) is selected in both cases on the largest 64-site cubic cluster we consider for the plateau state. This contrasts sharply with the effective quantum dimer model prediction which favors the ``R'' state, and demonstrates the breakdown of the perturbative mechanism at the Heisenberg point. These results provide a nonperturbative characterization of field-induced phases in pyrochlore magnets and predictive guidance for spin-1 and spin-32\tfrac{3}{2} materials.

Structured Unitary Tensor Network Representations for Circuit-Efficient Quantum Data Encoding

Guang Lin, Toshihisa Tanaka, Qibin Zhao

2602.16661 | Wed Feb 18 2026 | quant-ph cs.LG | PDF

Encoding classical data into quantum states is a central bottleneck in quantum machine learning: many widely used encodings are circuit-inefficient, requiring deep circuits and substantial quantum resources, which limits scalability on quantum hardware. In this work, we propose TNQE, a circuit-efficient quantum data encoding framework built on structured unitary tensor network (TN) representations. TNQE first represents each classical input via a TN decomposition and then compiles the resulting tensor cores into an encoding circuit through two complementary core-to-circuit strategies. To make this compilation trainable while respecting the unitary nature of quantum operations, we introduce a unitary-aware constraint that parameterizes TN cores as learnable block unitaries, enabling them to be directly optimized and directly encoded as quantum operators. The proposed TNQE framework enables explicit control over circuit depth and qubit resources, allowing the construction of shallow, resource-efficient circuits. Across a range of benchmarks, TNQE achieves encoding circuits as shallow as 0.04×0.04\times the depth of amplitude encoding, while naturally scaling to high-resolution images (256×256256 \times 256) and demonstrating practical feasibility on real quantum hardware.

Gaussian continuous tensor network states: short-distance properties and imaginary-time evolution

Marco Rigobello, Erez Zohar

2602.16266 | Tue Feb 17 2026 | hep-th quant-ph | PDF

We study Gaussian continuous tensor network states (GCTNS) - a finitely-parameterized subclass of Gaussian states admitting an interpretation as continuum limits of discrete tensor network states. We show that, at short distance, GCTNS correspond to free Lifshitz vacua, establishing a connection between certain entanglement properties of the two. Two schemes to approximate ground states of (free) bosonic field theories using GCTNS are presented: rational approximants to the exact dispersion relation and Trotterized imaginary-time evolution. We apply them to Klein-Gordon theory and characterize the resulting approximations, identifying the energy scales at which deviations from the target theory appear. These results provide a simple and analytically controlled setting to assess the strengths and limitations of GCTNS as variational ansätze for relativistic quantum fields.

Limits of Clifford Disentangling in Tensor Network States

Sergi Masot-Llima, Piotr Sierant, Paolo Stornati, Artur Garcia-Saez

2602.15987 | Tue Feb 17 2026 | quant-ph | PDF

Tensor network methods leverage the limited entanglement of quantum states to efficiently simulate many-body systems. Alternatively, Clifford circuits provide a framework for handling highly entangled stabilizer states, which have low magic and are thus also classically tractable. Clifford tensor networks combine the benefits of both approaches, exploiting Clifford circuits to reduce the classical complexity of the tensor network description of states, with promising effects on simulation approaches. We study the disentangling power of Clifford transformations acting on tensor networks, with a particular emphasis on entanglement cooling strategies. We identify regimes where exact or heuristic Clifford disentanglers are effective, explain the link between the two approaches, and characterize their breakdown as non-Clifford resources accumulate. Additionally, we prove that, beyond stabilizer settings, no Clifford operation can universally disentangle even a single qubit from an arbitrary non-Clifford rotation. Our results clarify both the capabilities and fundamental limitations of Clifford-based simulation methods.