Interplay of Confinement and Localization in a Programmable Rydberg Atom Chain
Andrea B. Rava, Jhon A. Montanez-Barrera, Kristel Michielsen, Jaka Vodeb

TL;DR
This study investigates how confinement and disorder affect correlation spreading in a programmable Rydberg atom chain, revealing localization effects and providing a framework for diagnosing hardware errors in quantum simulators.
Contribution
It demonstrates the interplay of confinement and disorder in Rydberg chains and introduces a method to diagnose hardware-induced localization effects.
Findings
Confinement leads to correlation truncation in ideal conditions.
Hardware imperfections cause correlation saturation indicating localization.
Quantitative agreement between experiments and emulations identifies error sources.
Abstract
Analog quantum simulators promise access to complex many-body dynamics, yet their performance is ultimately set by how device imperfections compete with intrinsic physical mechanisms. Here we present an end-to-end study of correlation spreading in a programmable Rydberg-atom chain realizing a longitudinal-field transverse-field Ising model, focusing on the joint impact of confinement and effective disorder. Experiments performed on QuEra's Aquila quantum processor are benchmarked against large-scale coherent emulations using the Juelich Quantum Annealing Simulator (JUQAS), enabling the controlled inclusion of realistic hardware imperfections. In the ideal coherent limit, a tunable longitudinal field induces confinement of domain-wall excitations into mesonic bound states, leading to a progressive truncation of the correlation light cone. When experimentally relevant inhomogeneities and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography
