Quantum Phases of Matter on a 256-Atom Programmable Quantum Simulator
Sepehr Ebadi, Tout T. Wang, Harry Levine, Alexander Keesling, Giulia, Semeghini, Ahmed Omran, Dolev Bluvstein, Rhine Samajdar, Hannes Pichler, Wen, Wei Ho, Soonwon Choi, Subir Sachdev, Markus Greiner, Vladan Vuletic, Mikhail, D. Lukin

TL;DR
This paper reports on a programmable quantum simulator with 256 neutral atoms that can explore complex quantum phases, phase transitions, and quantum dynamics, advancing quantum simulation and computation capabilities.
Contribution
The authors demonstrate a large-scale, programmable 2D quantum simulator with 256 qubits, realizing and studying various quantum phases and phase transitions.
Findings
Realized a 256-qubit quantum simulator with Rydberg atom arrays.
Created and characterized high-fidelity antiferromagnetic states.
Mapped the phase diagram and observed quantum phase transitions.
Abstract
Motivated by far-reaching applications ranging from quantum simulations of complex processes in physics and chemistry to quantum information processing, a broad effort is currently underway to build large-scale programmable quantum systems. Such systems provide unique insights into strongly correlated quantum matter, while at the same time enabling new methods for computation and metrology. Here, we demonstrate a programmable quantum simulator based on deterministically prepared two-dimensional arrays of neutral atoms, featuring strong interactions controlled via coherent atomic excitation into Rydberg states. Using this approach, we realize a quantum spin model with tunable interactions for system sizes ranging from 64 to 256 qubits. We benchmark the system by creating and characterizing high-fidelity antiferromagnetically ordered states, and demonstrate the universal properties of an…
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