Quantum Many-Body Jarzynski Equality and Dissipative Noise on a Digital Quantum Computer

The quantum Jarzynski equality and the Crooks relation are fundamental laws connecting equilibrium processes with nonequilibrium fluctuations. They are promising tools to benchmark quantum devices and measure free energy differences. While they are well established theoretically and also experimenta...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPhysical review. X Vol. 13; no. 4; p. 041023
Main Authors Hahn, Dominik, Dupont, Maxime, Schmitt, Markus, Luitz, David J., Bukov, Marin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Physical Society (APS) 02.11.2023
American Physical Society
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Summary:The quantum Jarzynski equality and the Crooks relation are fundamental laws connecting equilibrium processes with nonequilibrium fluctuations. They are promising tools to benchmark quantum devices and measure free energy differences. While they are well established theoretically and also experimental realizations for few-body systems already exist, their experimental validity in the quantum many-body regime has not been observed so far. Here, we present results for nonequilibrium protocols in systems with up to 16 interacting degrees of freedom obtained on trapped ion and superconducting qubit quantum computers, which test the quantum Jarzynski equality and the Crooks relation in the many-body regime. To achieve this, we overcome present-day limitations in the preparation of thermal ensembles and in the measurement of work distributions on noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices. We discuss the accuracy to which the Jarzynski equality holds on different quantum computing platforms subject to platform-specific errors. The analysis reveals the validity of Jarzynski’s equality in a regime with energy dissipation, compensated for by a fast unitary drive. This provides new insights for analyzing errors in many-body quantum simulators.
Bibliography:USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES). Materials Sciences & Engineering Division (MSE)
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES). Scientific User Facilities (SUF)
USDOE
AC02-05CH11231; AC05-00OR22725
ISSN:2160-3308
2160-3308
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevX.13.041023