In the strange world of quantum computing, randomness isn’t just noise. It’s a powerful resource. Whether you’re designing secure cryptographic systems, simulating processes that occur in nature, or showing off the speed of a quantum machine, randomness plays a central role.
However, producing randomness within a quantum computer is complicated. Most methods need a long chain of quantum operations, which risks breaking the fragile quantum states used in computation. That’s why scientists have long believed that true quantum randomness was only possible in small systems with limited capabilities.
However, researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have discovered a surprising shortcut. They’ve proven that even shallow, low-depth quantum circuits, which are easier to run and less error-prone, can still produce high-quality randomness.
Their technique could dramatically speed up the development of practical quantum computers, while also reshaping our understanding of what can be learned from quantum systems.
Introducing randomness within blocks
To understand what the researchers did, we need to talk about something called a unitary design. This is a mathematical way to describe how random a quantum system behaves. The closer a quantum circuit is to what’s known as a pseudorandom unitary design, the more it mimics the behavior of a perfectly random quantum process.
Traditionally, reaching this level of randomness requires long and complex quantum circuits, and modern noisy quantum hardware can’t achieve this. This is because the more qubits are manipulated to introduce randomness, the higher the risk of a system losing its fragile quantum state.
This forced the study authors to take a different route. Instead of trying to randomize a large system all at once, they imagined dividing it into smaller blocks of qubits.
Within each block, they used a short sequence of random operations to approximate randomness. Then, using a clever layering technique, they connected the qubits such that the randomness spread across the entire system.
This process allowed the entire system to behave as if it had gone through a much deeper random circuit, but with logarithmic depth (achieved through adding qubit sequences) instead of linear or polynomial depth (achieved through adding long chains of quantum operations).
“We have shown that random unitaries can be naturally generated in extremely low circuit depths,” the study authors said.
In simple terms, they proved mathematically that you don’t need to stir the whole quantum soup all at once. Stirring smaller portions just enough and combining them correctly produces true randomness, with far fewer steps. This not only saves computational effort but also helps avoid disturbing the quantum state, which is a major issue in real-world experiments.
The significance of randomness in the quantum world
This breakthrough carries big implications for both technology and theory. On the practical side, it may help researchers demonstrate quantum advantage, proof that quantum machines can outperform classical ones using simpler and smaller hardware.
This would also make applications in cryptography, machine learning, and complex simulations could become more feasible in the near term. Plus, the study also touches on something deeper. The team argues that the speed with which randomness, and thus quantum entanglement, can emerge might actually limit what we can observe.
In quantum physics, the more scrambled a system becomes, the harder it is to extract meaningful information from it. The researchers have shown that some aspects of quantum systems may be fundamentally out of reach, not because we lack good tools, but because nature hides them too fast.
“Our results show that several fundamental physical properties—evolution time, phases of matter, and causal structure— are provably hard to learn through conventional quantum experiments. This raises profound questions about the nature of physical observation itself,” the study authors note.
Next, the researchers plan to test their theoretical framework on actual quantum hardware and explore how these shallow, randomized circuits can help test the limits of what quantum experiments can actually uncover.
The study is published in the journal Science.