Lattice gauge theory and dynamical quantum phase transitions using noisy intermediate scale quantum devices
Simon Panyella Pedersen, Nikolaj Thomas Zinner

TL;DR
This paper explores the simulation of lattice gauge theories and dynamical quantum phase transitions on noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices, proposing a scalable superconducting circuit implementation with high fidelity and methods for experimental measurement.
Contribution
It introduces a superconducting circuit design for U(1) quantum link models, enabling the study of dynamical quantum phase transitions on near-term quantum hardware.
Findings
Dynamical quantum phase transitions occur in the studied model for all system sizes.
A gauge-invariant string order parameter correlates with Loschmidt amplitude zeros.
Circuit simulation achieves over 99.5% fidelity with realistic parameters.
Abstract
Lattice gauge theories are a fascinating and rich class of theories relating to the most fundamental models of particle physics, and as experimental control on the quantum level increases there is a growing interest in non-equilibrium effects such as dynamical quantum phase transitions. To demonstrate how these physical theories can be accessed in near-term quantum devices, we study the dynamics of a (1+1)D U(1) quantum link model following quenches of its mass-term. We find that the system undergoes dynamical quantum phase transitions for all system sizes considered, even the smallest where the dynamics can be solved analytically. We devise a gauge invariant string order parameter whose zeros correlates with the structure of the Loschmidt amplitude, making the order parameter useful for experimental study in near-term devices. The zeros of the Loschmidt amplitude as well as the zeros…
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