Many-Body Thermodynamics on Quantum Computers via Partition Function Zeros

ORAL

Abstract

Partition functions are ubiquitous in physics: they are important in determining the thermodynamic properties of many-body systems, and in understanding their phase transitions. As shown by Lee and Yang, analytically continuing the partition function to the complex plane allows us to obtains its zeros and thus the entire function. Moreover, the scaling and nature of these zeros can elucidate phase transitions. Here we show how to find partition function zeros on noisy intermediate-scale trapped ion quantum computers in a scalable manner, using the XXZ model as a prototype. We illustrate the transition from XY-like behavior to Ising-like behavior as a function of the anisotropy. While quantum computers cannot yet scale to the thermodynamic limit, our work provides a pathway to do so as hardware improves, allowing the determination of critical phenomena for systems that cannot be solved otherwise.

*This work was supported by the Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering grant No. DE-SC0019469, the McDevitt bequest at Georgetown, the CONACYT doctoral grant No. 455378, and National Science Foundation grant no. PHY-1430094.

Presenters

  • AKHIL FRANCIS

    • North Carolina State University

Authors

  • AKHIL FRANCIS

    • North Carolina State University
  • Daiwei Zhu

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Cinthia Huerta Alderete

    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • Sonika Johri

    • Intel Corporation - Hillsboro
    • IonQ, Inc.
    • IonQ Inc.
    • IonQ
    • Intel Labs
  • Xiao Xiao

    • North Carolina State University
  • James Freericks

    • Georgetown University
    • Department of Physics, Georgetown University
  • Christopher Monroe

    • Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland, College Park
    • IonQ, Inc.
    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • University of Maryland; Duke University; IonQ
  • Norbert M Linke

    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • Physics, University of Maryland
  • Alexander F Kemper

    • North Carolina State University
    • Department of Physics, North Carolina State University