Can One Trust Quantum Simulators?
Philipp Hauke, Fernando M. Cucchietti, Luca Tagliacozzo, Ivan Deutsch,, Maciej Lewenstein

TL;DR
Quantum simulators are promising tools for understanding complex quantum systems, but their reliability and efficiency are affected by imperfections like disorder and noise, requiring careful analysis before trusting their results.
Contribution
This paper critically examines the reliability and efficiency of quantum simulators, emphasizing the impact of disorder and noise through numerical simulations of a disordered Ising model.
Findings
Disorder can reduce the reliability of analog quantum simulators.
Large errors in local observables occur only at strong disorder levels.
Quantum simulators' trustworthiness depends on controlling imperfections.
Abstract
Various fundamental phenomena of strongly-correlated quantum systems such as high- superconductivity, the fractional quantum-Hall effect, and quark confinement are still awaiting a universally accepted explanation. The main obstacle is the computational complexity of solving even the most simplified theoretical models that are designed to capture the relevant quantum correlations of the many-body system of interest. In his seminal 1982 paper [Int. J. Theor. Phys. 21, 467], Richard Feynman suggested that such models might be solved by "simulation" with a new type of computer whose constituent parts are effectively governed by a desired quantum many-body dynamics. Measurements on this engineered machine, now known as a "quantum simulator," would reveal some unknown or difficult to compute properties of a model of interest. We argue that a useful quantum simulator must satisfy four…
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