Observation of topological transitions in interacting quantum circuits
P. Roushan, C. Neill, Yu Chen, M. Kolodrubetz, C. Quintana, N. Leung,, M. Fang, R. Barends, B. Campbell, Z. Chen, B. Chiaro, A. Dunsworth, E., Jeffrey, J. Kelly, A. Megrant, J. Mutus, P. O'Malley, D. Sank, A., Vainsencher, J. Wenner, T. White, A. Polkovnikov, A. N. Cleland

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel method using superconducting quantum circuits to explore topological phases, including interactions, by directly measuring topological invariants and visualizing state evolution across phase transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a new dynamical approach for studying topological phases in interacting and non-interacting systems using superconducting qubits, including a novel qubit architecture for controlling Hamiltonian terms.
Findings
Experimental visualization of the topological phase diagram of the Haldane model
Discovery of an interaction-induced topological phase
Development of a new qubit architecture for Hamiltonian control
Abstract
The discovery of topological phases in condensed matter systems has changed the modern conception of phases of matter. The global nature of topological ordering makes these phases robust and hence promising for applications. However, the non-locality of this ordering makes direct experimental studies an outstanding challenge, even in the simplest model topological systems, and interactions among the constituent particles adds to this challenge. Here we demonstrate a novel dynamical method to explore topological phases in both interacting and non-interacting systems, by employing the exquisite control afforded by state-of-the-art superconducting quantum circuits. We utilize this method to experimentally explore the well-known Haldane model of topological phase transitions by directly measuring the topological invariants of the system. We construct the topological phase diagram of this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
