Entanglement and Quantum Simulations of Nuclear Many-Body Systems
ORAL
Abstract
Recently, increasing effort has been devoted to re-examining quantum many-body systems from the point of view of quantum information. In particular, there has been renewed interest in understanding the phenomenon of entanglement due to its essential role in quantum computing and potential guidance in formulating the many-body problem.
In this talk we discuss and investigate bi- and multi-partite entanglement properties of nuclear systems, including exactly solvable models and light nuclei. We study how entanglement structures can rearrange into localized regions of the Hilbert space through Hamiltonian transformations, and how these patterns can indicate the emergence of physical phenomena. We also explore how entanglement localization, together with physics-driven mappings to qubit or qudit systems, can be utilized to develop quantum simulations that efficiently leverage the potential of quantum computers.
In this talk we discuss and investigate bi- and multi-partite entanglement properties of nuclear systems, including exactly solvable models and light nuclei. We study how entanglement structures can rearrange into localized regions of the Hilbert space through Hamiltonian transformations, and how these patterns can indicate the emergence of physical phenomena. We also explore how entanglement localization, together with physics-driven mappings to qubit or qudit systems, can be utilized to develop quantum simulations that efficiently leverage the potential of quantum computers.
*This work is supported by Bielefeld University, ERC-885281-KILONOVA Advanced Grant, U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, Inqubator for Quantum Simulation (IQuS) under Award Number DOE (NP) Award DE-SC0020970 via the program on Quantum Horizons: QIS Research and Innovation for Nuclear Science.
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Publication: Hengstenberg, Robin, Savage, arXiv:2306.16535 [nucl-th] (2023)
Illa, Robin, Savage, arXiv:2305.11941 [quant-ph] (2023)
Robin, Savage, arXiv:2301.05976 [quant-ph] (2023)
Robin, Savage, Pillet, Phys Rev. C 103, 034325 (2021)
Presenters
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Caroline E Robin
- Bielefeld University and GSI Darmstadt
- University Bielefeld