Effect of slowly decaying long-range interactions on topological qubits
Etienne Granet, Michael Levin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how slowly decaying long-range interactions affect the stability of topological qubits, revealing that ground state splitting scales as a stretched exponential with system size.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of topological degeneracy robustness under power-law long-range interactions beyond existing stability theorems.
Findings
Ground state splitting scales as a stretched exponential with system size.
Long-range interactions can significantly alter topological qubit stability.
Models show similar behavior across different types of long-range interactions.
Abstract
We study the robustness of topological ground state degeneracy to long-range interactions in quantum many-body systems. We focus on slowly decaying two-body interactions that scale like a power-law where is smaller than the spatial dimension; such interactions are beyond the reach of known stability theorems which only apply to short-range or rapidly decaying long-range perturbations. Our main result is a computation of the ground state splitting of several toy models, which are variants of the 1D Ising model with and . In one variant, the power-law interactions are replaced by all-to-all interactions, , where is the system size, while the other variant has true power-law…
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