47 research outputs found
Simulating Meson Scattering on Spin Quantum Simulators
Studying high-energy collisions of composite particles, such as hadrons and
nuclei, is an outstanding goal for quantum simulators. However, preparation of
hadronic wave packets has posed a significant challenge, due to the complexity
of hadrons and the precise structure of wave packets. This has limited
demonstrations of hadron scattering on quantum simulators to date. Observations
of confinement and composite excitations in quantum spin systems have opened up
the possibility to explore scattering dynamics in spin models. In this article,
we develop two methods to create entangled spin states corresponding to wave
packets of composite particles in analog quantum simulators of Ising spin
Hamiltonians. One wave-packet preparation method uses the blockade effect
enabled by beyond-nearest-neighbor Ising spin interactions. The other method
utilizes a quantum-bus-mediated exchange, such as the native spin-phonon
coupling in trapped-ion arrays. With a focus on trapped-ion simulators, we
numerically benchmark both methods and show that high-fidelity wave packets can
be achieved in near-term experiments. We numerically study scattering of wave
packets for experimentally realizable parameters in the Ising model and find
inelastic-scattering regimes, corresponding to particle production in the
scattering event, with prominent and distinct experimental signals. Our
proposal, therefore, demonstrates the potential of observing inelastic
scattering in near-term quantum simulators.Comment: 18 pages, 4 main figures, 2 supplementary figure
Probing the strongly driven spin-boson model in a superconducting quantum circuit
Quantum two-level systems interacting with the surroundings are ubiquitous in nature. The interaction suppresses quantum coherence and forces the system towards a steady state. Such dissipative processes are captured by the paradigmatic spin-boson model, describing a two-state particle, the “spin”, interacting with an environment formed by harmonic oscillators. A fundamental question to date is to what extent intense coherent driving impacts a strongly dissipative system. Here we investigate experimentally and theoretically a superconducting qubit strongly coupled to an electromagnetic environment and subjected to a coherent drive. This setup realizes the driven Ohmic spin-boson model. We show that the drive reinforces environmental suppression of quantum coherence, and that a coherent-to-incoherent transition can be achieved by tuning the drive amplitude. An out-of-equilibrium detailed balance relation is demonstrated. These results advance fundamental understanding of open quantum systems and bear potential for the design of entangled light-matter states
Probing the strongly driven spin-boson model in a superconducting quantum circuit
Quantum two-level systems interacting with the surroundings are ubiquitous in nature. The interaction suppresses quantum coherence and forces the system towards a steady state. Such dissipative processes are captured by the paradigmatic spin-boson model, describing a two-state particle, the “spin”, interacting with an environment formed by harmonic oscillators. A fundamental question to date is to what extent intense coherent driving impacts a strongly dissipative system. Here we investigate experimentally and theoretically a superconducting qubit strongly coupled to an electromagnetic environment and subjected to a coherent drive. This setup realizes the driven Ohmic spin-boson model. We show that the drive reinforces environmental suppression of quantum coherence, and that a coherent-to-incoherent transition can be achieved by tuning the drive amplitude. An out-of-equilibrium detailed balance relation is demonstrated. These results advance fundamental understanding of open quantum systems and bear potential for the design of entangled light-matter states
Probing the strongly driven spin-boson model in a superconducting quantum circuit
Two-level systems interacting with a bosonic environment appear everywhere in physics. Here, the authors use a superconducting device to study this spin-boson model in the presence of coherent driving, showing that the drive enhances dissipation into the environment and can localize or delocalize the system