28 research outputs found
Wireless network control of interacting Rydberg atoms
We identify a relation between the dynamics of ultracold Rydberg gases in
which atoms experience a strong dipole blockade and spontaneous emission, and a
stochastic process that models certain wireless random-access networks. We then
transfer insights and techniques initially developed for these wireless
networks to the realm of Rydberg gases, and explain how the Rydberg gas can be
driven into crystal formations using our understanding of wireless networks.
Finally, we propose a method to determine Rabi frequencies (laser intensities)
such that particles in the Rydberg gas are excited with specified target
excitation probabilities, providing control over mixed-state populations.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures; includes corrections and improvements from the
peer-review proces
Optimal control of Rydberg lattice gases
We present optimal control protocols to prepare different many-body quantum
states of Rydberg atoms in optical lattices. Specifically, we show how to
prepare highly ordered many-body ground states, GHZ states as well as some
superposition of symmetric excitation number Fock states, that inherit the
translational symmetry from the Hamiltonian, within sufficiently short
excitation times minimizing detrimental decoherence effects. For the GHZ
states, we propose a two-step detection protocol to experimentally verify the
optimal preparation of the target state based only on standard measurement
techniques. Realistic experimental constraints and imperfections are taken into
account by our optimization procedure making it applicable to ongoing
experiments.Comment: Accepted versio
Coherent many-body spin dynamics in a long-range interacting Ising chain
Coherent many-body quantum dynamics lies at the heart of quantum simulation
and quantum computation. Both require coherent evolution in the exponentially
large Hilbert space of an interacting many-body system. To date, trapped ions
have defined the state of the art in terms of achievable coherence times in
interacting spin chains. Here, we establish an alternative platform by
reporting on the observation of coherent, fully interaction-driven quantum
revivals of the magnetization in Rydberg-dressed Ising spin chains of atoms
trapped in an optical lattice. We identify partial many-body revivals at up to
about ten times the characteristic time scale set by the interactions. At the
same time, single-site-resolved correlation measurements link the magnetization
dynamics with inter-spin correlations appearing at different distances during
the evolution. These results mark an enabling step towards the implementation
of Rydberg atom based quantum annealers, quantum simulations of higher
dimensional complex magnetic Hamiltonians, and itinerant long-range interacting
quantum matter.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Importance sampling of randomized measurements for probing entanglement
We show that combining randomized measurement protocols with importance
sampling allows for characterizing entanglement in significantly larger quantum
systems and in a more efficient way than in previous work. A drastic reduction
of statistical errors is obtained using classical techniques of
machine-learning and tensor networks using partial information on the quantum
state. In present experimental settings of engineered many-body quantum systems
this effectively doubles the (sub-)system sizes for which entanglement can be
measured. In particular, we show an exponential reduction of the required
number of measurements to estimate the purity of product states and GHZ states.Comment: 6+6 pages, 3+4 figures, accepted version. Code available at
https://github.com/bvermersch/RandomMea
Entanglement Hamiltonian Tomography in Quantum Simulation
Entanglement is the crucial ingredient of quantum many-body physics, and
characterizing and quantifying entanglement in closed system dynamics of
quantum simulators is an outstanding challenge in today's era of intermediate
scale quantum devices. Here we discuss an efficient tomographic protocol for
reconstructing reduced density matrices and entanglement spectra for spin
systems. The key step is a parametrization of the reduced density matrix in
terms of an entanglement Hamiltonian involving only quasi local few-body terms.
This ansatz is fitted to, and can be independently verified from, a small
number of randomised measurements. The ansatz is suggested by Conformal Field
Theory in quench dynamics, and via the Bisognano-Wichmann theorem for ground
states. Not only does the protocol provide a testbed for these theories in
quantum simulators, it is also applicable outside these regimes. We show the
validity and efficiency of the protocol for a long-range Ising model in 1D
using numerical simulations. Furthermore, by analyzing data from and
ion quantum simulators [Brydges \textit{et al.}, Science, 2019], we demonstrate
measurement of the evolution of the entanglement spectrum in quench dynamics.Comment: 13 pages (6 pages supplemental information), 9 figure
Exploring Large-Scale Entanglement in Quantum Simulation
Entanglement is a distinguishing feature of quantum many-body systems, and
uncovering the entanglement structure for large particle numbers in quantum
simulation experiments is a fundamental challenge in quantum information
science. Here we perform experimental investigations of entanglement based on
the entanglement Hamiltonian, as an effective description of the reduced
density operator for large subsystems. We prepare ground and excited states of
a 1D XXZ Heisenberg chain on a 51-ion programmable quantum simulator and
perform sample-efficient `learning' of the entanglement Hamiltonian for
subsystems of up to 20 lattice sites. Our experiments provide compelling
evidence for a local structure of the entanglement Hamiltonian. This
observation marks the first instance of confirming the fundamental predictions
of quantum field theory by Bisognano and Wichmann, adapted to lattice models
that represent correlated quantum matter. The reduced state takes the form of a
Gibbs ensemble, with a spatially-varying temperature profile as a signature of
entanglement. Our results also show the transition from area to volume-law
scaling of Von Neumann entanglement entropies from ground to excited states. As
we venture towards achieving quantum advantage, we anticipate that our findings
and methods have wide-ranging applicability to revealing and understanding
entanglement in many-body problems with local interactions including higher
spatial dimensions.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure