Quantum simulation of bubble nucleation across a quantum phase transition
De Luo, Federica Maria Surace, Arinjoy De, Alessio Lerose, Elizabeth R. Bennewitz, Brayden Ware, Alexander Schuckert, Zohreh Davoudi, Alexey V. Gorshkov, Or Katz, Christopher Monroe

TL;DR
This paper uses a trapped-ion quantum simulator to observe real-time quantum bubble nucleation during a first-order quantum phase transition, providing insights into metastable state decay and nonequilibrium dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first direct observation of quantum bubble nucleation and out-of-equilibrium scaling in a controlled quantum simulator setting.
Findings
Observation of localized quantum bubbles forming and expanding.
Identification of nonequilibrium scaling behavior near the transition.
Validation of a generalized Kibble-Zurek mechanism in quantum phase transitions.
Abstract
The liquid-vapor transition is a classic example of a discontinuous (first-order) phase transition. Such transitions underlie many phenomena in cosmology, nuclear and particle physics, and condensed-matter physics. They give rise to long-lived metastable states, whose decay can be driven by either thermal or quantum fluctuations. Yet, direct experimental observations of how these states collapse into a stable phase remain elusive in the quantum regime. Here, we use a trapped-ion quantum simulator to observe the real-time dynamics of ``bubble nucleation'' induced by quantum fluctuations. Bubbles are localized domains of the stable phase which spontaneously form, or nucleate, and expand as the system is driven across a discontinuous quantum phase transition. Implementing a mixed-field Ising spin model with tunable and time-dependent interactions, we track the microscopic evolution of the…
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