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Research in quantum information science aims to surpass the scaling limitations of classical information processing. From a physicist's perspective, performance improvement involves a physical speedup in the quantum domain, achieved by dynamically exploiting quantum correlations. In this study, speed limits in interacting quantum systems are derived by comparing the rates of change in actual quantum dynamics with the quasiclassical evolution confined to the manifold of nonentangled separable states. The utility of the resulting bounds on entanglement-assisted speedup is demonstrated on bipartite qubit systems, bipartite qudit systems, as well as a complex multimode systems. Specifically, the proposed speed limits provide a tight bound on quantum speed advantage, including a quantum gain that can scale exponentially with the system's size. Extensions of the results to open systems and measurable witnesses are discussed.
Yasmin et al. (Mon,) studied this question.