Many-body localization in a quantum simulator with programmable random disorder
Jacob Smith, Aaron Lee, Philip Richerme, Brian Neyenhuis, Paul W., Hess, Philipp Hauke, Markus Heyl, David A. Huse, Christopher Monroe

TL;DR
This paper experimentally demonstrates many-body localization in a programmable quantum simulator, showing that disordered interacting spins can retain memory and resist thermalization, with implications for quantum memory applications.
Contribution
First experimental realization of many-body localization in a programmable quantum system with long-range interactions and tunable disorder.
Findings
Observation of memory retention in disordered spin systems
Detection of Poissonian energy level statistics
Entanglement growth at long times
Abstract
When a system thermalizes it loses all local memory of its initial conditions. This is a general feature of open systems and is well described by equilibrium statistical mechanics. Even within a closed (or reversible) quantum system, where unitary time evolution retains all information about its initial state, subsystems can still thermalize using the rest of the system as an effective heat bath. Exceptions to quantum thermalization have been predicted and observed, but typically require inherent symmetries or noninteracting particles in the presence of static disorder. The prediction of many-body localization (MBL), in which disordered quantum systems can fail to thermalize in spite of strong interactions and high excitation energy, was therefore surprising and has attracted considerable theoretical attention. Here we experimentally generate MBL states by applying an Ising Hamiltonian…
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