Multipartite entangled states in dipolar quantum simulators
Tommaso Comparin, Fabio Mezzacapo, Tommaso Roscilde

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that dipolar quantum simulators with $U(1)$ symmetric Hamiltonians can generate scalable multipartite entangled states, such as spin-squeezed and cat states, with potential applications in quantum metrology.
Contribution
It shows that the native dynamics of dipolar quantum simulators can produce scalable multipartite entanglement, including spin-squeezed and cat states, with implications for quantum technology.
Findings
Scalable spin squeezing at ${ m O}(N^{1/3})$ time.
Heisenberg scaling of sensitivity for cat states at ${ m O}(N)$ time.
Dipolar Hamiltonian dynamics can generate robust multipartite entanglement.
Abstract
The scalable production of multipartite entangled states in ensembles of qubits is a fundamental function of quantum devices, as such states are an essential resource both for fundamental studies on entanglement, as well as for applied tasks. Here we focus on the symmetric Hamiltonians for qubits with dipolar interactions -- a model realized in several state-of-the-art quantum simulation platforms for lattice spin models, including Rydberg-atom arrays with resonant interactions. Making use of exact and variational simulations, we theoretically show that the non-equilibrium dynamics generated by this lattice spin Hamiltonian shares fundamental features with that of the one-axis-twisting model, namely the simplest interacting collective-spin model with symmetry. The evolution governed by the dipolar Hamiltonian generates a cascade of multipartite entangled states --…
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