Probing string-breaking dynamics in a trapped-ion quantum simulator

POSTER

Abstract

In quantum chromodynamics, the theory of strong force in nature, color-charged particles do not exist in isolation. They are instead confined together to form color-neutral particles. A simple picture of confinement involves quark-antiquark pairs that are bound by a gluonic flux tube, or string. As the string energy increases (e.g. by separating out the color charges), it becomes energetically favorable to produce a new quark-antiquark pair, hence breaking the string. In this work, we experimentally study string breaking in a long-range Ising Hamiltonian with a trapped-ion quantum simulator. We model the color-charged particles with domain walls in the spin chain, and control the string energy with a longitudinal magnetic field. We characterize the complex dynamics of string breaking as we linearly ramp the string energy through the breaking threshold. With a short spin chain, the string breaks with all the spins flipping, and the probability of string breaking can be modeled via a Landau-Zener process. With a long spin chain, the string breaks by forming domains of flipped spins whose size varies with the ramping speed.

Presenters

  • De Luo

    • Department of Physics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, U.S.A
    • Department of Physics, Duke University, U.S.A.
    • Duke University

Authors

  • De Luo

    • Department of Physics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, U.S.A
    • Department of Physics, Duke University, U.S.A.
    • Duke University
  • Arinjoy De

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Federica Maria Surace

    • Caltech
  • Alessio Lerose

    • Oxford University
    • 3 Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics, Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford
  • Elizabeth R Bennewitz

    • University of Maryland College Park
    • University of Maryland
  • Alexander Schuckert

    • Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland
  • Brayden A Ware

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Zohreh Davoudi

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Alexey V Gorshkov

    • NIST and University of Maryland
    • National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
    • JQI
  • Or Katz

    • Duke University
  • Christopher Monroe

    • Duke University