Digital Quantum Simulation of the Schwinger Model and Symmetry Protection with Trapped Ions

ORAL

Abstract

Tracking the dynamics of physical systems in real time is a prime application of digital quantum computers. Using a trapped-ion system with up to six qubits, we simulate the real-time dynamics of a lattice gauge theory in 1+1 dimensions, i.e., the lattice Schwinger model, and demonstrate nonperturbative effects such as pair creation for times much longer than previously accessible. We study the gate requirement of two formulations of the model using the Suzuki-Trotter product formula, as well as the trade-off between errors from the ordering of the Hamiltonian terms, the Trotter step size, and experimental imperfections. To mitigate experimental errors, a recent symmetry-protection protocol for suppressing coherent errors and a symmetry-inspired post-selection scheme are applied. This work demonstrates the integrated theoretical, algorithmic, and experimental approach that is essential for efficient simulation of lattice gauge theories and other complex physical systems.

*ZD is supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of Science Early Career Award, under award no. DE-SC0020271, and by the Maryland Center for Fundamental Physics. ZD further acknowledges the RIKEN Center for AcceleratorBased Sciences, Wako, Japan for their support during earlier stages of this work. ZD and NML acknowledge support by the DOE's Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Award no. DE-SC0021143. NML received support from the National Science Foundation QLCI (OMA-2120757) and PFC (PHY-1430094). NML acknowledges funding by the Maryland-Army-ResearchLab Quantum Partnership (W911NF1920181). AMG is supported by a Joint Quantum Institute Postdoctoral Fellowship. MCT acknowledges the Quantum Algorithms and Machine Learning grant from NTT, number AGMT DTD 9/24/20.

Publication: Digital Quantum Simulation of the Schwinger Model and Symmetry Protection with Trapped Ions, arXiv:2112.14262

Presenters

  • Nhung H Nguyen

    • University of Maryland, College Park

Authors

  • Nhung H Nguyen

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Minh C Tran

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Center for Theoretical Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Yingyue Zhu

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Alaina Green

    • Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland
    • University of Washington
    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Cinthia H Alderete

    • Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland
    • Los Alamos National Lab
  • Zohreh Davoudi

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Norbert M Linke

    • University of Maryland, College Park