From Krylov Complexity to Observability: Capturing Phase Space Dimension with Applications in Quantum Reservoir Computing
Abstract
We demonstrate that time-evolved operators can construct a Krylov space to compute Operator complexity and introduce Krylov observability as a measure of effective phase space dimension in quantum systems. We test Krylov observability in the framework of quantum reservoir computing and show that it closely mirrors information processing capacity, a data-driven expressivity metric, while achieving computation times that are orders of magnitude faster. Our results validate Operator complexity and give the interpretation that data in a quantum reservoir is mapped onto the Krylov space.
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