Revealing the finite-frequency response of a bosonic quantum impurity
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2208.03053v5
- Date: Fri, 28 Jul 2023 16:48:18 GMT
- Title: Revealing the finite-frequency response of a bosonic quantum impurity
- Authors: S\'ebastien L\'eger, Th\'eo S\'epulcre, Dorian Fraudet, Olivier
Buisson, C\'ecile Naud, Wiebke Hasch-Guichard, Serge Florens, Izak Snyman,
Denis M. Basko, and Nicolas Roch
- Abstract summary: Quantum impurities are ubiquitous in condensed matter physics and constitute the most stripped-down realization of many-body problems.
We build a quantum simulator of the boundary sine-Gordon model, a non-trivial bosonic impurity problem.
This work opens exciting perspectives for the future such as quantifying quantum entanglement in the vicinity of a quantum critical point.
- Score: 0.15729203067736902
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Quantum impurities are ubiquitous in condensed matter physics and constitute
the most stripped-down realization of many-body problems. While measuring their
finite-frequency response could give access to key characteristics such as
excitations spectra or dynamical properties, this goal has remained elusive
despite over two decades of studies in nanoelectronic quantum dots. Conflicting
experimental constraints of very strong coupling and large measurement
bandwidths must be met simultaneously. We get around this problem using cQED
tools, and build a precisely characterized quantum simulator of the boundary
sine-Gordon model, a non-trivial bosonic impurity problem. We succeeded to
fully map out the finite frequency linear response of this system. Its reactive
part evidences a strong renormalisation of the nonlinearity at the boundary in
agreement with non-perturbative calculations. Its dissipative part reveals a
dramatic many-body broadening caused by multi-photon conversion. The
experimental results are matched quantitatively to a resummed diagrammatic
calculation based on a microscopically calibrated model. Furthermore, we push
the device into a regime where diagrammatic calculations break down, which
calls for more advanced theoretical tools to model many-body quantum circuits.
We also critically examine the technological limitations of cQED platforms to
reach universal scaling laws. This work opens exciting perspectives for the
future such as quantifying quantum entanglement in the vicinity of a quantum
critical point or accessing the dynamical properties of non-trivial many-body
problems.
Related papers
- Quantum error mitigation for Fourier moment computation [49.1574468325115]
This paper focuses on the computation of Fourier moments within the context of a nuclear effective field theory on superconducting quantum hardware.
The study integrates echo verification and noise renormalization into Hadamard tests using control reversal gates.
The analysis, conducted using noise models, reveals a significant reduction in noise strength by two orders of magnitude.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-01-23T19:10:24Z) - Quantum benefit of the quantum equation of motion for the strongly
coupled many-body problem [0.0]
The quantum equation of motion (qEOM) is a hybrid quantum-classical algorithm for computing excitation properties of a fermionic many-body system.
We demonstrate explicitly that the qEOM exhibits a quantum benefit due to the independence of the number of required quantum measurements.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-18T22:10:26Z) - Stabilization of Discrete Time-Crystaline Response on a Superconducting Quantum Computer by increasing the Interaction Range [0.0]
We present the outcomes of a digital quantum simulation where we overcome the limitations of the qubit connectivity in NISQ devices.
We demonstrate how to implement couplings among physically disconnected qubits at the cost of increasing the circuit depth.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-23T18:00:12Z) - Measurement-induced entanglement and teleportation on a noisy quantum
processor [105.44548669906976]
We investigate measurement-induced quantum information phases on up to 70 superconducting qubits.
We use a duality mapping, to avoid mid-circuit measurement and access different manifestations of the underlying phases.
Our work demonstrates an approach to realize measurement-induced physics at scales that are at the limits of current NISQ processors.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-08T18:41:53Z) - Universality of critical dynamics with finite entanglement [68.8204255655161]
We study how low-energy dynamics of quantum systems near criticality are modified by finite entanglement.
Our result establishes the precise role played by entanglement in time-dependent critical phenomena.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-23T19:23:54Z) - Dynamical mean-field theory for the Hubbard-Holstein model on a quantum
device [0.0]
We report a demonstration of solving the dynamical mean-field theory (DMFT) impurity problem for the Hubbard-Holstein model on the IBM 27-qubit Quantum Falcon Processor Kawasaki.
This opens up the possibility to investigate strongly correlated electron systems coupled to bosonic degrees of freedom and impurity problems with frequency-dependent interactions.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-05T00:36:21Z) - Quantum simulation using noisy unitary circuits and measurements [0.0]
Noisy quantum circuits have become an important cornerstone of our understanding of quantum many-body dynamics.
We give an overview of two classes of dynamics studied using random-circuit models, with a particular focus on the dynamics of quantum entanglement.
We consider random-circuit sampling experiments and discuss the usefulness of random quantum states for simulating quantum many-body dynamics on NISQ devices.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-13T14:00:06Z) - Quantum criticality using a superconducting quantum processor [0.0]
We probe the critical properties of the one-dimensional quantum Ising model on a programmable superconducting quantum chip via a Kibble-Zurek process.
In addition, we investigate how the improvement of NISQ computers (more qubits, less noise) will consolidate the computation of those universal physical properties.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-09-22T18:00:00Z) - An Algebraic Quantum Circuit Compression Algorithm for Hamiltonian
Simulation [55.41644538483948]
Current generation noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers are severely limited in chip size and error rates.
We derive localized circuit transformations to efficiently compress quantum circuits for simulation of certain spin Hamiltonians known as free fermions.
The proposed numerical circuit compression algorithm behaves backward stable and scales cubically in the number of spins enabling circuit synthesis beyond $mathcalO(103)$ spins.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-06T19:38:03Z) - Probing quantum information propagation with out-of-time-ordered
correlators [41.12790913835594]
Small-scale quantum information processors hold the promise to efficiently emulate many-body quantum systems.
Here, we demonstrate the measurement of out-of-time-ordered correlators (OTOCs)
A central requirement for our experiments is the ability to coherently reverse time evolution.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-02-23T15:29:08Z) - Quantum Non-equilibrium Many-Body Spin-Photon Systems [91.3755431537592]
dissertation concerns the quantum dynamics of strongly-correlated quantum systems in out-of-equilibrium states.
Our main results can be summarized in three parts: Signature of Critical Dynamics, Driven Dicke Model as a Test-bed of Ultra-Strong Coupling, and Beyond the Kibble-Zurek Mechanism.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-07-23T19:05:56Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.