A vector spin glass made of atoms and photons

ORAL  · Invited

Abstract

Spin glasses are canonical examples of complex matter. Although much about their structure remains uncertain, they inform the description of a wide array of complex phenomena, ranging from magnetic ordering in metals with impurities to aspects of evolution, protein folding, climate models, combinatorial optimization, and artificial intelligence. Advancing experimental insight into their structure requires repeatable control over microscopic degrees of freedom. I will present how we achieved this at the atomic level using a quantum optical system comprised of ultracold gases of atoms coupled via photons resonating within a confocal cavity. This realizes an unusual form of transverse-field vector spin glass with all-to-all connectivity. The controllability provided by this new spin-glass system may enable the study of spin glass physics in novel regimes, with application to quantum associative memory.

*We are grateful for funding from the Army Research Office (Grant \#W911NF2210261), NTT Research, and the Q-NEXT DOE National Quantum Information Science Research Center.

Publication: R. M. Kroeze, B. P. Marsh, D. Atri Schuller, H. Hunt, S. Gopalakrishnan, J. Keeling, and B. L. Lev
Replica symmetry breaking in a quantum-optical vector spin glass
arXiv:2311.04216

Presenters

  • Benjamin L Lev

    • Stanford University

Authors

  • Benjamin L Lev

    • Stanford University
  • Ronen Kroeze

    • Stanford University
  • Brendan Marsh

    • Stanford University
  • David Atri Schuller

    • Stanford University
  • Henry Hunt

    • Stanford University
  • Michael Winer

    • JQI/UMD
  • Alexander Bourzutschky

    • Stanford University
  • Sarang Gopalakrishnan

    • Princeton University
  • Jonathan Keeling

    • University of St. Andrews
    • U. of St. Andrews