U(1) Wilson lattice gauge theories in digital quantum simulators
Christine Muschik, Markus Heyl, Esteban Martinez, Thomas Monz, Philipp, Schindler, Berit Vogell, Marcello Dalmonte, Philipp Hauke, Rainer Blatt,, Peter Zoller

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed theoretical analysis of a digital quantum simulation protocol for U(1) lattice gauge theories, demonstrating its potential to observe fundamental phenomena and discussing its robustness and scalability.
Contribution
It introduces an analytically integrated gauge boson approach for efficient quantum simulation of U(1) gauge theories on trapped-ion platforms, preserving gauge invariance.
Findings
Simulation can observe particle-antiparticle pair production.
Protocol is robust against typical error sources.
Scales polynomially with system size.
Abstract
Lattice gauge theories describe fundamental phenomena in nature, but calculating their real-time dynamics on classical computers is notoriously difficult. In a recent publication [Nature 534, 516 (2016)], we proposed and experimentally demonstrated a digital quantum simulation of the paradigmatic Schwinger model, a U(1)-Wilson lattice gauge theory describing the interplay between fermionic matter and gauge bosons. Here, we provide a detailed theoretical analysis of the performance and the potential of this protocol. Our strategy is based on analytically integrating out the gauge bosons, which preserves exact gauge invariance but results in complicated long-range interactions between the matter fields. Trapped-ion platforms are naturally suited to implementing these interactions, allowing for an efficient quantum simulation of the model, with a number of gate operations that scales only…
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