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Observation of separated dynamics of charge and spin in the Fermi-Hubbard model

Authors :
Arute, Frank
Arya, Kunal
Babbush, Ryan
Bacon, Dave
Bardin, Joseph C.
Barends, Rami
Bengtsson, Andreas
Boixo, Sergio
Broughton, Michael
Buckley, Bob B.
Buell, David A.
Burkett, Brian
Bushnell, Nicholas
Chen, Yu
Chen, Zijun
Yu-An Chen
Chiaro, Ben
Collins, Roberto
Cotton, Stephen J.
Courtney, William
Demura, Sean
Derk, Alan
Dunsworth, Andrew
Eppens, Daniel
Eckl, Thomas
Erickson, Catherine
Farhi, Edward
Fowler, Austin
Foxen, Brooks
Gidney, Craig
Giustina, Marissa
Graff, Rob
Gross, Jonathan A.
Habegger, Steve
Harrigan, Matthew P.
Ho, Alan
Hong, Sabrina
Huang, Trent
Huggins, William
Ioffe, Lev B.
Isakov, Sergei V.
Jeffrey, Evan
Jiang, Zhang
Jones, Cody
Kafri, Dvir
Kechedzhi, Kostyantyn
Kelly, Julian
Kim, Seon
Klimov, Paul V.
Korotkov, Alexander N.
Kostritsa, Fedor
Landhuis, David
Laptev, Pavel
Lindmark, Mike
Lucero, Erik
Marthaler, Michael
Martin, Orion
Martinis, John M.
Marusczyk, Anika
Mcardle, Sam
Mcclean, Jarrod R.
Mccourt, Trevor
Mcewen, Matt
Megrant, Anthony
Mejuto-Zaera, Carlos
Mi, Xiao
Mohseni, Masoud
Mruczkiewicz, Wojciech
Mutus, Josh
Naaman, Ofer
Neeley, Matthew
Neill, Charles
Neven, Hartmut
Newman, Michael
Niu, Murphy Yuezhen
O Brien, Thomas E.
Ostby, Eric
Pató, Bálint
Petukhov, Andre
Putterman, Harald
Quintana, Chris
Reiner, Jan-Michael
Roushan, Pedram
Rubin, Nicholas C.
Sank, Daniel
Satzinger, Kevin J.
Smelyanskiy, Vadim
Strain, Doug
Sung, Kevin J.
Schmitteckert, Peter
Szalay, Marco
Tubman, Norm M.
Vainsencher, Amit
White, Theodore
Vogt, Nicolas
Yao, Z. Jamie
Yeh, Ping
Zalcman, Adam
Zanker, Sebastian
Source :
INSPIRE-HEP

Abstract

Strongly correlated quantum systems give rise to many exotic physical phenomena, including high-temperature superconductivity. Simulating these systems on quantum computers may avoid the prohibitively high computational cost incurred in classical approaches. However, systematic errors and decoherence effects presented in current quantum devices make it difficult to achieve this. Here, we simulate the dynamics of the one-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model using 16 qubits on a digital superconducting quantum processor. We observe separations in the spreading velocities of charge and spin densities in the highly excited regime, a regime that is beyond the conventional quasiparticle picture. To minimize systematic errors, we introduce an accurate gate calibration procedure that is fast enough to capture temporal drifts of the gate parameters. We also employ a sequence of error-mitigation techniques to reduce decoherence effects and residual systematic errors. These procedures allow us to simulate the time evolution of the model faithfully despite having over 600 two-qubit gates in our circuits. Our experiment charts a path to practical quantum simulation of strongly correlated phenomena using available quantum devices.<br />20 pages, 15 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
INSPIRE-HEP
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....751f2b467ff28591f2fc46d346a49256