A Landau Theory for Spin Squeezing
POSTER
Abstract
Generating spin-squeezed states in quantum simulators with power-law interactions is a key experimental challenge with limited theoretical guidance. While numerical evidence suggests it should be possible to achieve spin squeezing with sufficiently long-range (but still energetically extensive) XXZ Hamiltonians, the precise requirements remain unclear. Here, we conjecture a comprehensive explanation for the "squeezing phase diagram" of long-range XXZ models. While squeezing in such models is dynamically generated by time evolution from simple product states, our explanation is intimately connected to the presence of finite-temperature equilibrium order in the Hamiltonian and thermalization within symmetry sectors of fixed total magnetization. Using a variety of numerical methods, we test our conjecture in one-dimensional models and find necessary and sufficient conditions for spin squeezing. We discuss the implications of these conditions for realizing spin-squeezing in a variety of quantum simulation platforms.
*This work was supported by the Army Research Office through the MURI program (grant number W911NF-20-1-0136). MB acknowledges support through the Department of Defense (DoD) through the National Defense Science & Engineering Graduate (NDSEG) Fellowship Program. E.J.D. acknowledges support from the Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science.
Presenters
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Maxwell B Block
- Harvard University