Realizing quantum Ising models in tunable two-dimensional arrays of single Rydberg atoms
Henning Labuhn, Daniel Barredo, Sylvain Ravets, Sylvain de, L\'es\'eleuc, Tommaso Macr\`i, Thierry Lahaye, and Antoine Browaeys

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a versatile platform using two-dimensional arrays of single Rydberg atoms to simulate quantum Ising models, enabling exploration of complex spin dynamics and exotic matter with high controllability.
Contribution
It introduces a novel setup of Rydberg atom arrays with arbitrary geometries for quantum simulation of spin models, including anisotropic interactions and dynamics of up to thirty spins.
Findings
High filling fractions with known initial configurations.
Excellent agreement with ab-initio simulations in isotropic cases.
Measurable influence of multilevel Rydberg D-states in anisotropic interactions.
Abstract
Spin models are the prime example of simplified manybody Hamiltonians used to model complex, real-world strongly correlated materials. However, despite their simplified character, their dynamics often cannot be simulated exactly on classical computers as soon as the number of particles exceeds a few tens. For this reason, the quantum simulation of spin Hamiltonians using the tools of atomic and molecular physics has become very active over the last years, using ultracold atoms or molecules in optical lattices, or trapped ions. All of these approaches have their own assets, but also limitations. Here, we report on a novel platform for the study of spin systems, using individual atoms trapped in two-dimensional arrays of optical microtraps with arbitrary geometries, where filling fractions range from 60 to 100% with exact knowledge of the initial configuration. When excited to Rydberg…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
