Identification of Symmetry-Protected Topological States on Noisy Quantum Computers
ORAL
Abstract
Identifying topological properties is a major challenge because, by definition, topological states do not have a local order parameter. While a generic solution to this challenge is not available yet, a broad class of topological states, namely, symmetry-protected topological (SPT) states, can be identified by distinctive degeneracies in their entanglement spectrum. Here, we propose and realize two complementary protocols to probe these degeneracies based on, respectively, symmetry-resolved entanglement entropies and measurement-based computational algorithms. The two protocols link quantum information processing to the classification of SPT phases of matter. They invoke the creation of a cluster state and are implemented on an IBM quantum computer. The experimental findings are compared to noisy simulations, allowing us to study the stability of topological states to perturbations and noise.
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Presenters
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Daniel Azses
Bar-Ilan University
Authors
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Daniel Azses
Bar-Ilan University
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Rafael Haenel
Stewart Blusson Quantum Matter Institute and Department of Physics, University of British Columbia, University of British Columbia
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Yehuda Naveh
IBM Research - Haifa
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Robert Raussendorf
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of British Columbia, University of British Columbia
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Eran Sela
School of Physics and Astronomy, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv University, Condensed Matter Physics, school of Physics and Astronomy, Tel Aviv university
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Emanuele Dalla Torre
Physics, Bar-Ilan University, Bar-Ilan University, Bar Ilan Univ