Preparing quantum many-body scar states on quantum computers
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum many-body scar states are highly excited eigenstates of many-body systems that exhibit atypical entanglement and correlation properties relative to other eigenstates at the same energy density. Scar states also give rise to infinitely long-lived coherent dynamics when the system is prepared in a special initial state having finite overlap with them. Many models with exact scar states have been constructed, but the fate of scarred eigenstates and dynamics when these models are perturbed is difficult to study with classical computational techniques. In this work, we propose state preparation protocols for individual scar states in a particular model, as well as superpositions of them that give rise to coherent dynamics. For superpositions of scar states, we propose both a linear depth unitary and a finite-depth nonunitary state preparation protocol, the latter of which uses measurement and postselection to reduce the circuit depth. For individual scarred eigenstates, we propose a circuit architecture with polynomial depth. We also provide proof of principle implementations of these protocols on superconducting quantum hardware.
*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science, Research Centers, Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS) under contract number DE-AC02-07CH11359 (E.G, A.L. D.K. S.A, P.O., T.I.). AR was supported by and NSF early career grand under NSF DMR-1945395. S.A. also recieved additional funding through NASA Academic Mission Services, Contract No. NNA16BD14C. We acknowledge use of the IBM Q for this work. The views expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy or position of IBM or the IBM Q team.
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Publication: Planned Paper: "Preparing quantum many-body scar states on quantum computers"
Presenters
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Erik Gustafson
- Fermilab
- Fermi National Accelerator Lab