Quantum computation of dynamical quantum phase transitions and entanglement tomography in a lattice gauge theory
Niklas Mueller, Joseph A. Carolan, Andrew Connelly, Zohreh Davoudi,, Eugene F. Dumitrescu, K\"ubra Yeter-Aydeniz

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the use of a quantum computer to study non-equilibrium dynamics, entanglement, and dynamical quantum phase transitions in a lattice gauge theory, marking a significant step in quantum simulations of high-energy physics.
Contribution
First quantum computing simulation of dynamical quantum phase transitions and entanglement tomography in a lattice gauge theory, specifically the Schwinger model.
Findings
Observation of a dynamical quantum phase transition in a lattice gauge theory
Successful quantum computation of non-equal time correlation functions
Entanglement structure analysis of non-equilibrium states
Abstract
Strongly-coupled gauge theories far from equilibrium may exhibit unique features that could illuminate the physics of the early universe and of hadron and ion colliders. Studying real-time phenomena has proven challenging with classical-simulation methods, but is a natural application of quantum simulation. To demonstrate this prospect, we quantum compute non-equal time correlation functions and perform entanglement tomography of non-equilibrium states of a simple lattice gauge theory, the Schwinger model, using a trapped-ion quantum computer by IonQ Inc. As an ideal target for near-term devices, a recently-predicted [Zache et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 050403 (2019)] dynamical quantum phase transition in this model is studied by preparing, quenching, and tracking the subsequent non-equilibrium dynamics in three ways: i) overlap echos signaling dynamical transitions, ii) non-equal time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Physics and Python Applications · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography
