Spectral features of polaronic excitations in a superconducting analog simulator
Julian K. Nauth, Vladimir M. Stojanovic

TL;DR
This paper explores the spectral features of polaronic excitations in a superconducting quantum simulator, revealing a sharp transition to heavily dressed states and providing insights into system dynamics post-quench.
Contribution
It introduces a model emulating polaronic excitations in a superconducting setup and analyzes spectral functions across coupling regimes using advanced numerical methods.
Findings
Identification of a level-crossing transition at a critical coupling
Spectral function characterization of small-polaron formation
Predictions of system dynamics after excitation-phonon quench
Abstract
We investigate spectral properties of polaronic excitations within the framework of an analog quantum simulator based on inductively coupled superconducting transmon qubits and microwave resonators. This system emulates a lattice model that describes a nonlocal coupling of an itinerant spinless-fermion excitation to dispersionless (Einstein-type) phonons through the Peierls and breathing-mode interaction mechanisms. The model is characterized by a sharp, level-crossing transition at a critical value of the effective excitation-phonon coupling strength; above the transition point, the ground state of this model corresponds to a heavily dressed (small-polaron) excitation. Using the kernel-polynomial method, we evaluate the momentum-frequency resolved spectral function of this system for a broad range of parameters. In particular, we underscore the ramifications of the fact that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic Field Sensors Techniques · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Real-time simulation and control systems
