You can just call it second stabilizer Rényi entropy or non-stabilizerness if you find "magic" strange and prose is more your flavor than poetry.

Strange quarks[1] are not magic. :)

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strange_quark

Actually "non-stabilizerness" does describe it better than "magic".

> In quantum information theory, magic is a property that quantifies the computational resources needed to describe quantum states beyond stabilizer states.

> In 2024–2025, quantum magic was detected in top quark pairs produced at the Large Hadron Collider; it is the first observation of this property in fundamental particle collisions.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_(quantum_information)

And "second stabilizer Rényi entropy" is even better, it's exactly the kind of technical term I'd prefer, that describes what it means.

> One measure of quantum magic is the stabilizer Rényi entropy of order α such that..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R%C3%A9nyi_entropy#Stabilizer_...