Lattice gauge theory (LGT) is one of the most fundamental subjects in modern quantum many-body physics, and has recently attracted many research interests in quantum simulations. Herewe experimentally investigate the emergent ℤ2 gauge invariance in a 1D superconducting circuit with 10 transmon qubits. By precisely adjusting the staggered longitude and transverse fields to each qubit, we construct an effective Hamiltonian containing a LGT and gauge-broken terms. The corresponding matter sector can exhibit localization, and there also exist a 3-qubit operator, of which the expectation value can retain nonzero for long time in a low-energy regime. The above localization can be regarded as confinement of the matter field, and the 3-body operator is the ℤ2 gauge generator. Thus, these experimental results demonstrate that, despite the absent of gauge structure in the effective Hamiltonian, ℤ2 gauge invariance can still emerge in the low-energy regime. Our work paves the way for both theoretically and experimentally studying the rich physics in quantum many-body system with an emergent gauge invariance.
Operator spreading, often characterized by out-of-time-order correlators (OTOCs), is one of the central concepts in quantum many-body physics. However, measuring OTOCs is experimentallychallenging due to the requirement of reversing the time evolution of the system. Here we apply Floquet engineering to investigate operator spreading in a superconducting 10-qubit chain. Floquet engineering provides an effective way to tune the coupling strength between nearby qubits, which is used to demonstrate quantum walks with tunable coupling, dynamic localization, reversed time evolution, and the measurement of OTOCs. A clear light-cone-like operator propagation is observed in the system with multiphoton excitations, and the corresponding spreading velocity is equal to that of quantum walk. Our results indicate that the method has a high potential for simulating a variety of quantum many-body systems and their dynamics, which is also scalable to more qubits and higher dimensional circuits.
We propose an implementation to approximate Z2 lattice gauge theory (LGT) on superconducting quantum circuits, where the effective theory is a mixture of a LGT and a gauge-broken term.Using matrix product state based methods, both the ground state properties and quench dynamics are systematically investigated. With an increase of the transverse (electric) field, the system displays a quantum phase transition from a disordered phase to a translational symmetry breaking phase. In the ordered phase, an approximate Gaussian law of the Z2 LGT emerges in the ground state. Moreover, to shed light on the experiments, we also study the quench dynamics, where there is a dynamical signature of the spontaneous translational symmetry breaking. The spreading of the single particle of matter degree is diffusive under the weak transverse field, while it is ballistic with small velocity for the strong field. Furthermore, due to the existence of an approximate Gaussian law under the strong transverse field, the matter degree can also exhibit a confinement which leads to a strong suppression of the nearest-neighbor hopping. Our results pave the way for simulating the LGT on superconducting circuits, including the quantum phase transition and quench dynamics.
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 semiconductorsuperlattice, 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.