U(1) lattice gauge theory and string roughening on a triangular Rydberg array
Lisa Bombieri, Torsten V. Zache, Hannes Pichler, and Daniel Gonz\'alez-Cuadra

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that string roughening phenomena, including logarithmic transverse width growth and Lüscher correction, can be observed in a Rydberg quantum simulator modeling a (2+1)D U(1) lattice gauge theory, enabling experimental studies of confinement.
Contribution
The authors map a triangular Rydberg array onto a (2+1)D U(1) lattice gauge theory and show that string roughening emerges naturally, with observable signatures near a deconfined quantum critical point.
Findings
Logarithmic growth of string transverse width with charge separation
Universal Lüscher correction to the confining potential
Observation of string breaking via particle-pair creation
Abstract
Lattice gauge theories (LGTs) describe fundamental interactions in particle physics. A central phenomenon in these theories is confinement, which binds quarks and antiquarks into hadrons through the formation of string-like flux tubes of gauge fields. Simulating confinement dynamics is a challenging task, but recent advances in quantum simulation are enabling the exploration of LGTs in regimes beyond the reach of classical computation. For analog devices, a major difficulty is the realization of strong plaquette interactions, which generate string fluctuations that can drive a roughening transition. Understanding string roughening -- where strong transversal functions lead to an effective restoration of translational symmetry at long distances -- is of central importance in the study of confinement. In this work, we show that string roughening emerges naturally in an analog Rydberg…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum many-body systems · Topological Materials and Phenomena
