Qubit vitrification and entanglement criticality on a quantum simulator

ORAL

Abstract

Many elusive quantum phenomena emerge from a quantum system interacting with its classical environment. Quantum simulators enable us to program this interaction by using measurement operations. Measurements generally remove part of the entanglement built between the qubits in a simulator. While in simple cases entanglement may disappear at a constant rate as we measure qubits one by one, the evolution of entanglement under measurements for a given class of quantum states is generally unknown. In this presentation, we will show that consecutive measurements of qubits in a simulator can lead to criticality, separating two phases of entanglement. Using up to 48 qubits, we prepare an entangled superposition of ground states to a classical spin model. Progressively measuring the qubits drives the simulator through an observable vitrification point and into a spin glass phase of entanglement. Our findings suggest coupling to a classical environment may drive critical phenomena in more general quantum states.

*This work was supported by the Ministère de l'Économie et de l'Innovation du Québec via its contributions to its Research Chair in Quantum Computing and the IBM Q Hub of Institut quantique at Université de Sherbrooke. The work was also supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery grant. Jeremy acknowledges the support of a B2X scholarship from the Fonds de recherche--Nature et technologies and a scholarship from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [funding reference number: 456431992]. We acknowledge Calcul Québec and Compute Canada for computing resources.

Publication: Preprint at https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.13640

Presenters

  • Jeremy Côté

    • Université de Sherbrooke

Authors

  • Jeremy Côté

    • Université de Sherbrooke
  • Stefanos Kourtis

    • Universite de Sherbrooke