Characterizing a non-equilibrium phase transition on a quantum computer
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum many-body systems can exhibit rich universal behavior at the transition between phases of matter, even for systems far from equilibrium. Probing the dynamics of a quantum system undergoing a non-equilibrium phase transition is a difficult task for a classical computer and one that could be done potentially faster on a quantum computer. In this talk, we present our recent work [1] where we use the Quantinuum H1-1 quantum computer to realize a non-equilibrium phase transition in a dissipative quantum circuit generalization of a classical disease spreading model that is known to possess an absorbing state transition. We use techniques such as qubit-reuse [2] and “error avoidance” based on real-time conditional logic to realize a large-scale quantum simulation (of systems with 73 sites time evolved up to 72 circuit layers) with quantitatively accurate signatures of the critical scaling at the phase transition.
[1] E. Chertkov et al. arXiv:2209.12889 (2022).
[2] M. DeCross et al. arXiv:2210.08039 (2022).
[1] E. Chertkov et al. arXiv:2209.12889 (2022).
[2] M. DeCross et al. arXiv:2210.08039 (2022).
–
Publication: E. Chertkov et al. arXiv:2209.12889 (2022).
Presenters
-
Eli Chertkov
Quantinuum
Authors
-
Eli Chertkov
Quantinuum
-
Zihan Cheng
University of Texas at Austin
-
Andrew C Potter
University of British Columbia
-
Sarang Gopalakrishnan
Princeton University
-
Thomas M Gatterman
Quantinuum
-
Justin A Gerber
Quantinuum
-
Kevin Gilmore
Quantinuum
-
Dan Gresh
Quantinuum
-
Alex Hall
Quantinuum
-
Aaron Hankin
Quantinuum
-
Mitchell Matheny
Quantinuum
-
Tanner Mengle
Quantinuum
-
David Hayes
Quantinuum
-
Brian Neyenhuis
Quantinuum
-
Russell Stutz
Quantinuum
-
Michael Foss-Feig
Quantinuum