Probing Entanglement Scaling Across a Quantum Phase Transition on a Quantum Computer
Qiang Miao, Tianyi Wang, Kenneth R. Brown, Thomas Barthel, Marko Cetina

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the use of a quantum computer with MERA to study entanglement scaling across a quantum phase transition, overcoming previous measurement and finite-size limitations.
Contribution
It introduces a holographic tomography scheme on a quantum computer to efficiently analyze entanglement in critical many-body systems.
Findings
Observed a quantum phase transition with symmetry breaking
Demonstrated log-law entanglement scaling at criticality
Showcased MERA's potential for studying strongly-correlated systems
Abstract
The investigation of strongly-correlated quantum matter is difficult due to the curse of dimensionality and intricate entanglement structures. These challenges are particularly pronounced in the vicinity of continuous quantum phase transitions, where quantum fluctuations manifest across all length scales. While quantum simulators give controlled access to a number of strongly correlated systems, the study of critical phenomena has been hampered by finite-size effects arising from diverging correlation lengths. Moreover, the experimental investigation of entanglement in many-body systems has been hindered by limitations in measurement protocols. To address these challenges, we employ the multiscale entanglement renormalization ansatz (MERA) and implement a holographic scheme for subsystem tomography on a fully-connected trapped-ion quantum computer. Our method accurately represents…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
