Quantum XY Magnetism in a Two-dimensional Rydberg Atom Array
ORAL
Abstract
Optical tweezer arrays of strongly-interacting Rydberg atoms are an emerging platform for studying quantum magnetism. In this talk, we present an experimental and theoretical investigation of a new two-dimensional, square lattice system of up to 100 atoms, where each effective spin-1/2 is encoded in a pair of Rydberg states. The ordinary dipole-dipole interaction between two such Rydberg atoms then manifests as a long-range XY Hamiltonian, featuring a continuous U(1) spin-rotation symmetry. We design and use an adiabatic preparation scheme to realize low-temperature states of this XY model - for both ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic XY couplings - and validate the efficacy of our protocol with extensive numerical simulations. We also demonstrate how to inject additional energy into the isolated system via a controlled quantum quench. Remarkably, with ferromagnetic XY coupling we observe off-diagonal long-range order in the spin correlation functions, even at finite effective temperature. Spontaneously breaking a continuous symmetry in this way is ordinarily forbidden by the Hohenberg-Mermin-Wagner theorem; here, the underlying long-range interactions are key.
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Publication: "Continuous Symmetry Breaking in a Two-dimensional Rydberg Array"<br>https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.12930
Presenters
Marcus Bintz
University of California, Berkeley
Authors
Marcus Bintz
University of California, Berkeley
Cheng Chen
Institut d'Optique, CNRS
Guillaume Bornet
Institut d'Optique, CNRS
Gabriel Emperauger
Institut d'Optique, CNRS
Lucas Leclerc
Institut d'Optique, CNRS
Vincent S Liu
University of California, Berkeley
Pascal Scholl
Institut d'Optique, CNRS, Caltech
Daniel Barredo
Institut d'Optique, CNRS
Johannes Hauschild
University of California, Berkeley
Shubhayu Chatterjee
UC Berkeley
Michael Schuler
Universität Innsbruck
Andreas M Läuchli
Paul Scherrer Institute
Michael P Zaletel
University of California, Berkeley, UC Berkeley
Thierry Lahaye
CNRS/THALES
Norman Y Yao
University of California, Berkeley, Harvard University