883 research outputs found
Disentangling interacting symmetry protected phases of fermions in two dimensions
We construct fixed point lattice models for group supercohomology symmetry
protected topological (SPT) phases of fermions in 2+1D. A key feature of our
approach is to construct finite depth circuits of local unitaries that
explicitly build the ground states from a tensor product state. We then recover
the classification of fermionic SPT phases, including the group structure under
stacking, from the algebraic composition rules of these circuits. Furthermore,
we show that the circuits are symmetric, implying that the group
supercohomology phases can be many body localized. Our strategy involves first
building an auxiliary bosonic model, and then fermionizing it using the duality
of Chen, Kapustin, and Radicevic. One benefit of this approach is that it
clearly disentangles the role of the algebraic group supercohomology data,
which is used to build the auxiliary bosonic model, from that of the spin
structure, which is combinatorially encoded in the lattice and enters only in
the fermionization step. In particular this allows us to study our models on 2d
spatial manifolds of any topology and to define a lattice-level procedure for
ungauging fermion parity.Comment: 17 + 13 pages, 16 figures, v3 published versio
Floquet codes with a twist
We describe a method for creating twist defects in the honeycomb Floquet code
of Hastings and Haah. In particular, we construct twist defects at the
endpoints of condensation defects, which are built by condensing emergent
fermions along one-dimensional paths. We argue that the twist defects can be
used to store and process quantum information fault tolerantly, and demonstrate
that, by preparing twist defects on a system with a boundary, we obtain a
planar variant of the Floquet code. Importantly, our
construction of twist defects maintains the connectivity of the hexagonal
lattice, requires only 2-body measurements, and preserves the three-round
period of the measurement schedule. We furthermore generalize the twist defects
to Floquet codes defined on -dimensional qudits. As an aside,
we use the Floquet codes and condensation defects to define
Floquet codes whose instantaneous stabilizer groups are characterized by the
topological order of certain Abelian twisted quantum doubles.Comment: 35+7 pages, 19 figures; v2 corrected typos; v3 corrected
fault-tolerance argument, clarified implementation of logical S gat
Disentangling supercohomology symmetry-protected topological phases in three spatial dimensions
We build exactly solvable lattice Hamiltonians for fermionic symmetry-protected topological (SPT) phases in (3+1)D classified by group supercohomology. A central benefit of our construction is that it produces an explicit finite-depth quantum circuit (FDQC) that prepares the ground state from an unentangled symmetric state. The FDQC allows us to clearly demonstrate the characteristic properties of supercohomology phases—namely, symmetry fractionalization on fermion parity flux loops—predicted by continuum formulations. By composing the corresponding FDQCs, we also recover the stacking relations of supercohomology phases. Furthermore, we derive topologically ordered gapped boundaries for the supercohomology models by extending the protecting symmetries, analogous to the construction of topologically ordered boundaries for bosonic SPT phases. Our approach relies heavily on dualities that relate certain bosonic 2-group SPT phases with supercohomology SPT phases. We develop physical motivation for the dualities in terms of explicit lattice prescriptions for gauging a 1-form symmetry and for condensing emergent fermions. We also comment on generalizations to supercohomology phases in higher dimensions and to fermionic SPT phases outside of the supercohomology framework
Disentangling supercohomology symmetry-protected topological phases in three spatial dimensions
We build exactly solvable lattice Hamiltonians for fermionic
symmetry-protected topological (SPT) phases in (3+1)D classified by group
supercohomology. A central benefit of our construction is that it produces an
explicit finite-depth quantum circuit (FDQC) that prepares the ground state
from an unentangled symmetric state. The FDQC allows us to clearly demonstrate
the characteristic properties of supercohomology phases - namely, symmetry
fractionalization on fermion parity flux loops - predicted by continuum
formulations. By composing the corresponding FDQCs, we also recover the
stacking relations of supercohomology phases. Furthermore, we derive
topologically ordered gapped boundaries for the supercohomology models by
extending the protecting symmetries, analogous to the construction of
topologically ordered boundaries for bosonic SPT phases. Our approach relies
heavily on dualities that relate certain bosonic 2-group SPT phases with
supercohomology SPT phases. We develop physical motivation for the dualities in
terms of explicit lattice prescriptions for gauging a 1-form symmetry and for
condensing emergent fermions. We also comment on generalizations to
supercohomology phases in higher dimensions and to fermionic SPT phases outside
of the supercohomology framework.Comment: 28+25 pages, 31 figure
Engineering Floquet codes by rewinding
Floquet codes are a novel class of quantum error-correcting codes with
dynamically generated logical qubits, which arise from a periodic schedule of
non-commuting measurements. We engineer new examples of Floquet codes with
measurement schedules that during each period. The rewinding
schedules are advantageous in our constructions for both obtaining a desired
set of instantaneous stabilizer groups and for constructing boundaries. Our
first example is a Floquet code that has instantaneous stabilizer groups that
are equivalent -- via finite-depth circuits -- to the 2D color code and
exhibits a automorphism of the logical operators. Our second
example is a Floquet code with instantaneous stabilizer codes that have the
same topological order as the 3D toric code. This Floquet code exhibits a
splitting of the topological order of the 3D toric code under the associated
sequence of measurements i.e., an instantaneous stabilizer group of a single
copy of 3D toric code in one round transforms into an instantaneous stabilizer
group of two copies of 3D toric codes up to nonlocal stabilizers, in the
following round. We further construct boundaries for this 3D code and argue
that stacking it with two copies of 3D subsystem toric code allows for a
transversal implementation of the logical non-Clifford gate. We also show
that the coupled-layer construction of the X-cube Floquet code can be modified
by a rewinding schedule such that each of the instantaneous stabilizer codes is
finite-depth-equivalent to the X-cube model up to toric codes; the X-cube
Floquet code exhibits a splitting of the X-cube model into a copy of the X-cube
model and toric codes under the measurement sequence. Our final example is a
generalization of the honeycomb code to 3D, which has instantaneous stabilizer
codes with the same topological order as the 3D fermionic toric code.Comment: 20+3 pages, 27 figures, files are available at
https://github.com/dua-arpit/floquetcodes, v2 changes: added more details on
the rewinding X-cube Floquet code and made minor updates in color code
figures in the appendi
Identification of genes conferring tolerance to lignocellulose-derived inhibitors by functional selections in soil metagenomes
The production of fuels or chemicals from lignocellulose currently requires thermochemical pretreatment to release fermentable sugars. These harsh conditions also generate numerous small-molecule inhibitors of microbial growth and fermentation, limiting production. We applied small-insert functional metagenomic selections to discover genes that confer microbial tolerance to these inhibitors, identifying both individual genes and general biological processes associated with tolerance to multiple inhibitory compounds. Having screened over 248 Gb of DNA cloned from 16 diverse soil metagenomes, we describe gain-of-function tolerance against acid, alcohol, and aldehyde inhibitors derived from hemicellulose and lignin, demonstrating that uncultured soil microbial communities hold tremendous genetic potential to address the toxicity of pretreated lignocellulose. We recovered genes previously known to confer tolerance to lignocellulosic inhibitors as well as novel genes that confer tolerance via unknown functions. For instance, we implicated galactose metabolism in overcoming the toxicity of lignin monomers and identified a decarboxylase that confers tolerance to ferulic acid; this enzyme has been shown to catalyze the production of 4-vinyl guaiacol, a valuable precursor to vanillin production. These metagenomic tolerance genes can enable the flexible design of hardy microbial catalysts, customized to withstand inhibitors abundant in specific bioprocessing applications
Pauli topological subsystem codes from Abelian anyon theories
We construct Pauli topological subsystem codes characterized by arbitrary
two-dimensional Abelian anyon theories--this includes anyon theories with
degenerate braiding relations and those without a gapped boundary to the
vacuum. Our work both extends the classification of two-dimensional Pauli
topological subsystem codes to systems of composite-dimensional qudits and
establishes that the classification is at least as rich as that of Abelian
anyon theories. We exemplify the construction with topological subsystem codes
defined on four-dimensional qudits based on the anyon
theory with degenerate braiding relations and the chiral semion theory--both of
which cannot be captured by topological stabilizer codes. The construction
proceeds by "gauging out" certain anyon types of a topological stabilizer code.
This amounts to defining a gauge group generated by the stabilizer group of the
topological stabilizer code and a set of anyonic string operators for the anyon
types that are gauged out. The resulting topological subsystem code is
characterized by an anyon theory containing a proper subset of the anyons of
the topological stabilizer code. We thereby show that every Abelian anyon
theory is a subtheory of a stack of toric codes and a certain family of twisted
quantum doubles that generalize the double semion anyon theory. We further
prove a number of general statements about the logical operators of translation
invariant topological subsystem codes and define their associated anyon
theories in terms of higher-form symmetries.Comment: 67 + 35 pages, single column forma
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