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Accurately computing electronic properties of a quantum ring

Authors :
Z. Yao
Alan R. Derk
Kevin J. Satzinger
Sergio Boixo
Andre Petukhov
B. Burkett
Thomas E. O'Brien
Jarrod R. McClean
Pavel Laptev
Doug Strain
Ofer Naaman
David A. Buell
Edward Farhi
Zijun Chen
Matthew Neeley
Ping Yeh
Bob B. Buckley
Masoud Mohseni
Charles Neill
Yu Chen
Andreas Bengtsson
Sabrina Hong
Daniel Eppens
Anthony Megrant
Alan Ho
Matthew D. Trevithick
Eric Ostby
Nicholas Redd
Sergei V. Isakov
Matt McEwen
J. A. Gross
Andrew Dunsworth
Josh Mutus
M. Broughton
Michael Newman
Nicholas C. Rubin
Ted White
Ryan Babbush
Fedor Kostritsa
Roberto Collins
Rami Barends
M. Jacob-Mitos
A. Opremcak
Trevor McCourt
Pedram Roushan
Lev Ioffe
Seon Kim
Hartmut Neven
Kunal Arya
Kevin C. Miao
Marco Szalay
Cody Jones
Sean Demura
Brooks Foxen
Benjamin Villalonga
J. Hilton
Orion Martin
Sean D. Harrington
Frank Arute
Zhang Jiang
Alexander N. Korotkov
Adam Zalcman
Julian Kelly
Austin G. Fowler
Vadim Smelyanskiy
Paul V. Klimov
Kostyantyn Kechedzhi
Igor L. Aleiner
Juan Atalaya
Bálint Pató
Catherine Erickson
Joseph C. Bardin
William Courtney
Murphy Yuezhen Niu
Matthew P. Harrigan
William J. Huggins
Xiao Mi
Marissa Giustina
David Landhuis
J. Campero
Nicholas Bushnell
Chris Quintana
Evan Jeffrey
Benjamin Chiaro
Dvir Kafri
E. Lucero
Vladimir Shvarts
Craig Gidney
Trent Huang
Alexandre Bourassa
Daniel Sank
Wojciech Mruczkiewicz
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

A promising approach to study condensed-matter systems is to simulate them on an engineered quantum platform1–4. However, the accuracy needed to outperform classical methods has not been achieved so far. Here, using 18 superconducting qubits, we provide an experimental blueprint for an accurate condensed-matter simulator and demonstrate how to investigate fundamental electronic properties. We benchmark the underlying method by reconstructing the single-particle band structure of a one-dimensional wire. We demonstrate nearly complete mitigation of decoherence and readout errors, and measure the energy eigenvalues of this wire with an error of approximately 0.01 rad, whereas typical energy scales are of the order of 1 rad. Insight into the fidelity of this algorithm is gained by highlighting the robust properties of a Fourier transform, including the ability to resolve eigenenergies with a statistical uncertainty of 10−4 rad. We also synthesize magnetic flux and disordered local potentials, which are two key tenets of a condensed-matter system. When sweeping the magnetic flux we observe avoided level crossings in the spectrum, providing a detailed fingerprint of the spatial distribution of local disorder. By combining these methods we reconstruct electronic properties of the eigenstates, observing persistent currents and a strong suppression of conductance with added disorder. Our work describes an accurate method for quantum simulation5,6 and paves the way to study new quantum materials with superconducting qubits. As a blueprint for high-precision quantum simulation, an 18-qubit algorithm that consists of more than 1,400 two-qubit gates is demonstrated, and reconstructs the energy eigenvalues of the simulated one-dimensional wire to a precision of 1 per cent.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c41e6b99bab7fd7b29fa518d0af7fff