Observation of Bloch Oscillations and Wannier-Stark Localization on a Superconducting Processor

  1. Xue-Yi Guo,
  2. Zi-Yong Ge,
  3. Hekang Li,
  4. Zhan Wang,
  5. Yu-Ran Zhang,
  6. Peangtao Song,
  7. Zhongcheng Xiang,
  8. Xiaohui Song,
  9. Yirong Jin,
  10. Kai Xu,
  11. Dongning Zheng,
  12. and Heng Fan
In a crystal lattice system, a conduction electron can exhibit Bloch oscillations and Wannier-Stark localization (WSL) under a constant force, which has been observed in semiconductor
superlattice, photonic waveguide array and cold atom systems. Here, we experimentally investigate the Bloch oscillations on a 5-qubit superconducting processor. We simulate the electron movement with spin (or photon) propagation. We find, in the presence of a linear potential, the propagation of a single spin charge is constrained. It tends to oscillate near the neighborhood of initial positions, which is a strong signature of Bloch oscillations and WSL. In addition, we use the maximum probability that a spin charge can propagate from one boundary to another boundary to represent the WSL length, and it is verified that the localization length is inversely correlated to the potential gradient. Remarkably, benefiting from the precise simultaneous readout of the all qubits, we can also study the thermal transport of this system. The experimental results show that, similar to the spin charges, the thermal transport is also blocked under a linear potential. Our work demonstrates possibilities for further simulation and exploration of the Bloch oscillation phenomena and other quantum physics using multiqubit superconducting quantum processor.

Probing the dynamical phase transition with a superconducting quantum simulator

  1. Kai Xu,
  2. Zheng-Hang Sun,
  3. Wuxin Liu,
  4. Yu-Ran Zhang,
  5. Hekang Li,
  6. Hang Dong,
  7. Wenhui Ren,
  8. Pengfei Zhang,
  9. Franco Nori,
  10. Dongning Zheng,
  11. Heng Fan,
  12. and H. Wang
Non-equilibrium quantum many-body systems, which are difficult to study via classical computation, have attracted wide interest. Quantum simulation can provide insights into these problems.
Here, using a programmable quantum simulator with 16 all-to-all connected superconducting qubits, we investigate the dynamical phase transition in the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model with a quenched transverse field. Clear signatures of the dynamical phase transition, merging different concepts of dynamical criticality, are observed by measuring the non-equilibrium order parameter, nonlocal correlations, and the Loschmidt echo. Moreover, near the dynamical critical point, we obtain the optimal spin squeezing of −7.0±0.8 decibels, showing multipartite entanglement useful for measurements with precision five-fold beyond the standard quantum limit. Based on the capability of entangling qubits simultaneously and the accurate single-shot readout of multi-qubit states, this superconducting quantum simulator can be used to study other problems in non-equilibrium quantum many-body systems.

Observation of multi-component atomic Schrödinger cat states of up to 20 qubits

  1. Chao Song,
  2. Kai Xu,
  3. Hekang Li,
  4. Yuran Zhang,
  5. Xu Zhang,
  6. Wuxin Liu,
  7. Qiujiang Guo,
  8. Zhen Wang,
  9. Wenhui Ren,
  10. Jie Hao,
  11. Hui Feng,
  12. Heng Fan,
  13. Dongning Zheng,
  14. Dawei Wang,
  15. H. Wang,
  16. and Shiyao Zhu
We report on deterministic generation of 18-qubit genuinely entangled Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) state and multi-component atomic Schrödinger cat states of up to 20 qubits on
a quantum processor, which features 20 superconducting qubits interconnected by a bus resonator. By engineering a one-axis twisting Hamiltonian enabled by the resonator-mediated interactions, the system of qubits initialized coherently evolves to an over-squeezed, non-Gaussian regime, where atomic Schrödinger cat states, i.e., superpositions of atomic coherent states including GHZ state, appear at specific time intervals in excellent agreement with theory. With high controllability, we are able to take snapshots of the dynamics by plotting quasidistribution Q-functions of the 20-qubit atomic cat states, and globally characterize the 18-qubit GHZ state which yields a fidelity of 0.525±0.005 confirming genuine eighteen-partite entanglement. Our results demonstrate the largest entanglement controllably created so far in solid state architectures, and the process of generating and detecting multipartite entanglement may promise applications in practical quantum metrology, quantum information processing and quantum computation.

Observation of dynamical quantum phase transition by a superconducting qubit simulation

  1. Xue-Yi Guo,
  2. Chao Yang,
  3. Yu Zeng,
  4. Yi Peng,
  5. He-Kang Li,
  6. Hui Deng,
  7. Yi-Rong Jin,
  8. Shu Chen,
  9. Dongning Zheng,
  10. and Heng Fan
A dynamical quantum phase transition can occur in time evolution of sudden quenched quantum systems across phase transition. It corresponds to nonanalytic behavior at a critical time
for rate function of quantum state return amplitude, analogous to nonanalyticity of the free energy density at the critical temperature in macroscopic systems. A variety of many-body systems can be represented in momentum space as a spin-1/2 state evolving in Bloch sphere, where each momentum mode is decoupled and thus can be simulated independently by a single qubit. Here, we report the observation of dynamical quantum phase transition by a superconducting qubit simulation of the quantum quench dynamics of many-body systems. We take the Ising model with transverse field as an example. In experiment, the spin state initially polarized longitudinally evolves based on Hamiltonian with adjustable parameters depending on momentum and strength of the transverse magnetic field. The time evolved quantum state will be readout by state tomography. Evidences of dynamical quantum phase transition such as paths of time evolution state on Bloch sphere, the non-analytic behavior in dynamical free energy and the emergence of Skyrmion lattice in momentum-time space are provided. The experiment data agrees well with theoretical and numerical calculations. The experiment demonstrates for the first time explicitly the topological invariant, both topological trivial and non-trivial, for dynamical quantum phase transition. Our experiment results show that the quantum phase transition of many-body systems can be successfully simulated by a single qubit by varying control parameter over the range of momentum.

Demonstration of irreversibility and dissipation relation of thermodynamics with a superconducting qubit

  1. Xue-Yi Guo,
  2. Yi Peng,
  3. Changnan Peng,
  4. Hui Deng,
  5. Yi-Rong Jin,
  6. Chengchun Tang,
  7. Xiaobo Zhu,
  8. Dongning Zheng,
  9. and Heng Fan
We investigate experimentally the relation between thermodynamical irreversibility and dissipation on a superconducting Xmon qubit. This relation also implies the second law and the
Landauer principle on dissipation in the irreversible computations. In our experiment, the qubit is initialized to states according to Gibbs distribution. Work injection and extraction processes are conducted through two kinds of unitary driving protocols, for both a forward process and its corresponding mirror reverses. Relative entropy and relative Re’nyi entropy are employed to measure the asymmetry between paired forward and backward work injection or extraction processes. We show experimentally that relative entropy and relative Re’nyi entropy measured irreversibility are related to the average of work dissipation and average of exponentiated work dissipation respectively. Our work provides solid experimental support for the theory of quantum thermodynamics.

Emulating many-body localization with a superconducting quantum processor

  1. Kai Xu,
  2. Jin-Jun Chen,
  3. Yu Zeng,
  4. Yuran Zhang,
  5. Chao Song,
  6. Wuxin Liu,
  7. Qiujiang Guo,
  8. Pengfei Zhang,
  9. Da Xu,
  10. Hui Deng,
  11. Keqiang Huang,
  12. H. Wang,
  13. Xiaobo Zhu,
  14. Dongning Zheng,
  15. and Heng Fan
The law of statistical physics dictates that generic closed quantum many-body systems initialized in nonequilibrium will thermalize under their own dynamics. However, the emergence
of many-body localization (MBL) owing to the interplay between interaction and disorder, which is in stark contrast to Anderson localization that only addresses noninteracting particles in the presence of disorder, greatly challenges this concept because it prevents the systems from evolving to the ergodic thermalized state. One critical evidence of MBL is the long-time logarithmic growth of entanglement entropy, and a direct observation of it is still elusive due to the experimental challenges in multiqubit single-shot measurement and quantum state tomography. Here we present an experiment of fully emulating the MBL dynamics with a 10-qubit superconducting quantum processor, which represents a spin-1/2 XY model featuring programmable disorder and long-range spin-spin interactions. We provide essential signatures of MBL, such as the imbalance due to the initial nonequilibrium, the violation of eigenstate thermalization hypothesis, and, more importantly, the direct evidence of the long-time logarithmic growth of entanglement entropy. Our results lay solid foundations for precisely simulating the intriguing physics of quantum many-body systems on the platform of large-scale multiqubit superconducting quantum processors.