Towards simulating 2D effects in lattice gauge theories on a quantum computer
Danny Paulson, Luca Dellantonio, Jan F. Haase, Alessio Celi, Angus, Kan, Andrew Jena, Christian Kokail, Rick van Bijnen, Karl Jansen, Peter, Zoller, Christine A. Muschik

TL;DR
This paper proposes a quantum simulation scheme for 2D quantum electrodynamics using variational quantum algorithms, enabling exploration of gauge theories and effects on current quantum hardware.
Contribution
It introduces a scalable, efficient method to simulate 2D gauge theories on quantum computers, including novel protocols for magnetic effects and running coupling calculations.
Findings
Feasibility of simulating 2D QED on current quantum hardware.
Development of VQE protocols for magnetic field effects.
Classical simulation of measurement requirements under realistic conditions.
Abstract
Gauge theories are the most successful theories for describing nature at its fundamental level, but obtaining analytical or numerical solutions often remains a challenge. We propose an experimental quantum simulation scheme to study ground state properties in two-dimensional quantum electrodynamics (2D QED) using existing quantum technology. The proposal builds on a formulation of lattice gauge theories as effective spin models in arXiv:2006.14160, which reduces the number of qubits needed by eliminating redundant degrees of freedom and by using an efficient truncation scheme for the gauge fields. The latter endows our proposal with the perspective to take a well-controlled continuum limit. Our protocols allow in principle scaling up to large lattices and offer the perspective to connect the lattice simulation to low energy observable quantities, e.g. the hadron spectrum, in the…
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