Given a set of (linearly independent) $d\times d$ complex unitary matrices $\{U_i\}_{i=1}^n \subseteq M_d$ with $n\geq d$, does there exist a vector $v\in \mathbb{C}^d$ such that $$\text{span} \{U_1v, U_2v, \ldots , U_nv\} = \mathbb{C}^d ?$$
The motivation for this question comes from the theory of mixed unitary quantum channels. A quantum channel $\Phi: M_d \rightarrow M_d$ is a completely positive and trace preserving linear map. Any such map admits a Kraus representation of the form $\Phi (X) = \sum_{i=1}^k A_i X A_i^*$, where $\{A_i \}_{i=1}^k \subseteq M_d$ and $\sum_{i=1}^k A_i^* A_i = \mathbb{I}_d$. We say that a quantum channel is mixed unitary if it can be expressed as a convex combination of unitary conjugations: $\Phi (X) = \sum_{i=1}^n p_i U_i X U_i^*$. Our aim then is to look for a rank one input projector $X = vv^*$ for some $v\in \mathbb{C}^d$ such that the output $\Phi (vv^*) = \sum_{i=1}^n p_i (U_i v) (U_i v)^*$ has full rank. This is possible only if $n\geq d$. To avoid trivial counterexamples, we can also assume that $\{ U_i\}_{i=1}^n \subseteq M_d$ is linearly independent.
Follow-up question: Since it has been shown below that the question can be answered in the negative for $d\geq 4$, the natural way of progression would be to ask if one can provide a classification of all the sets of (linearly independent) unitary matrices $\{U_i\}_{i=1}^n \subseteq M_d$ which allow for the existence of $v\in \mathbb{C}^d$ such that $$\text{span}\{U_1v, U_2v, \ldots ,U_nv\}=\mathbb{C}^d.$$ One can also try to answer this question for (linearly independent) sets of arbitrary complex matrices: $\{ A_i \}_{i=1}^k \subseteq M_d$.