Observation of string-breaking dynamics in a quantum simulator
Arinjoy De, Alessio Lerose, De Luo, Federica M. Surace, Alexander, Schuckert, Elizabeth R. Bennewitz, Brayden Ware, William Morong, Kate S., Collins, Zohreh Davoudi, Alexey V. Gorshkov, Or Katz, Christopher Monroe

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first experimental observation of string-breaking dynamics in a quantum simulator, using a trapped-ion system to emulate a (1+1)-D lattice gauge theory and study confinement and pair creation.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental realization of string-breaking dynamics in a quantum simulator, advancing the simulation of non-perturbative phenomena in gauge theories.
Findings
Confinement affects charge spreading and oscillations.
String tension influences charge localization.
String-breaking occurs after increasing string tension, with charge pairs forming and spreading.
Abstract
Spontaneous particle-pair formation is a fundamental phenomenon in nature. It can, for example, appear when the potential energy between two particles increases with separation, as if they were connected by a tense string. Beyond a critical separation, new particle pairs can form, causing the string to break. String-breaking dynamics in quantum chromodynamics play a vital role in high-energy particle collisions and early universe evolution. Simulating string evolution and hadron formation is, therefore, a grand challenge in modern physics. Quantum simulators, well-suited for studying dynamics, are expected to outperform classical computing methods. However, the required experimental capabilities to simulate string-breaking dynamics have not yet been demonstrated, even for simpler models of the strong force. We experimentally probe, for the first time, the spatiotemporal dynamics of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Physics and Python Applications · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
