| Literature DB >> 31491305 |
Yangsen Ye1,2, Zi-Yong Ge3,4, Yulin Wu1,2, Shiyu Wang1,2, Ming Gong1,2, Yu-Ran Zhang5,6, Qingling Zhu1,2, Rui Yang1,2, Shaowei Li1,2, Futian Liang1,2, Jin Lin1,2, Yu Xu1,2, Cheng Guo1,2, Lihua Sun1,2, Chen Cheng5,7, Nvsen Ma3, Zi Yang Meng3,4,8,9, Hui Deng1,2, Hao Rong1,2, Chao-Yang Lu1,2, Cheng-Zhi Peng1,2, Heng Fan3,4,8,9, Xiaobo Zhu1,2, Jian-Wei Pan1,2.
Abstract
Superconducting circuits have emerged as a powerful platform of quantum simulation, especially for emulating the dynamics of quantum many-body systems, because of their tunable interaction, long coherence time, and high-precision control. Here in experiments, we construct a Bose-Hubbard ladder with a ladder array of 20 qubits on a 24-qubit superconducting processor. We investigate theoretically and demonstrate experimentally the dynamics of single- and double-excitation states with distinct behaviors, indicating the uniqueness of the Bose-Hubbard ladder. We observe the linear propagation of photons in the single-excitation case, satisfying the Lieb-Robinson bounds. The double-excitation state, initially placed at the edge, localizes; while placed in the bulk, it splits into two single-excitation modes spreading linearly toward two boundaries, respectively. Remarkably, these phenomena, studied both theoretically and numerically as unique properties of the Bose-Hubbard ladder, are represented coherently by pairs of controllable qubits in experiments. Our results show that collective excitations, as a single mode, are not free. This work paves the way to simulation of exotic logic particles by subtly encoding physical qubits and exploration of rich physics by superconducting circuits.Year: 2019 PMID: 31491305 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.050502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161