The Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid (TLL) concept is believed to generically
describe the strongly-correlated physics of one-dimensional systems at low
temperatures. A hallmark signature in 1D conductors is the quantum phase
transition between metallic and insulating states induced by a single impurity.
However, this transition impedes experimental explorations of real-world TLLs.
Furthermore, its theoretical treatment, explaining the universal energy
rescaling of the conductance at low temperatures, has so far been achieved
exactly only for specific interaction strengths. Quantum simulation can provide
a powerful workaround. Here, a hybrid metal-semiconductor dissipative quantum
circuit is shown to implement the analogue of a TLL of adjustable electronic
interactions comprising a single, fully tunable scattering impurity.
Measurements reveal the renormalization group `beta-function' for the
conductance that completely determines the TLL universal crossover to an
insulating state upon cooling. Moreover, the characteristic scaling energy
locating at a given temperature the position within this conductance
renormalization flow is established over nine decades versus circuit
parameters, and the out-of-equilibrium regime is explored. With the quantum
simulator quality demonstrated from the precise parameter-free validation of
existing and novel TLL predictions, quantum simulation is achieved in a strong
sense, by elucidating interaction regimes which resist theoretical solutions.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev.