Efficiently measuring d-wave pairing and beyond in quantum gas microscopes

ORAL

Abstract

Understanding the mechanism of high-temperature superconductivity is among the most important problems in physics, for which quantum simulation can provide new insights. However, it remains challenging to characterize superconductivity in existing cold-atom quantum simulation platforms. Here, we introduce a protocol for measuring a broad class of observables in fermionic quantum gas microscopes, including long-range superconducting pairing correlations (after a repulsive-to-attractive mapping). The protocol only requires global controls followed by site-resolved particle number measurements -- capabilities that have been already demonstrated in multiple experiments -- and is designed by analyzing the Hilbert-space structure of dimers of two sites. The protocol is sample efficient and we further optimize our pulses for robustness to experimental imperfections such as lattice inhomogeneity. Our work introduces a general tool for manipulating quantum states on optical lattices, enhancing their ability to tackle problems such as that of high-temperature superconductivity.

Publication: arXiv:2412.13186

Presenters

  • Daniel K. Mark

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Daniel K. Mark

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Hong-Ye Hu

    • Harvard University
  • Joyce Kwan

    • Harvard University; University of Colorado Boulder
    • Harvard University
  • Christian Kokail

    • Harvard University
    • Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
  • Soonwon Choi

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Susanne F Yelin

    • Harvard University