4.8 Article

Digital quantum simulation of Floquet symmetry-protected topological phases

Journal

NATURE
Volume 607, Issue 7919, Pages 468-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04854-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [12075128, 11725419, U20A2076, 92065204]
  2. National Basic Research Programme of China [2017YFA0304300]
  3. Zhejiang Province Key Research and Development Programme [2020C01019]
  4. Key-Area Research and Development Programme of Guangdong Province [2020B0303030001]
  5. Tsinghua University
  6. AFOSR
  7. DoE QSA
  8. NSFQLCI [OMA-2120757]
  9. Shanghai Qi Zhi Institute

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This paper reports the observation of a non-equilibrium state of matter, Floquet symmetry-protected topological phases, implemented through digital quantum simulation with programmable superconducting qubits. The researchers observe robust long-lived temporal correlations and subharmonic temporal response for the edge spins.
Quantum many-body systems away from equilibrium host a rich variety of exotic phenomena that are forbidden by equilibrium thermodynamics. A prominent example is that of discrete time crystals(1-8), in which time-translational symmetry is spontaneously broken in periodically driven systems. Pioneering experiments have observed signatures of time crystalline phases with trapped ions(9,10), solid-state spin systems(11-15), ultracold atoms(16,17) and superconducting qubits(18-20). Here we report the observation of a distinct type of non-equilibrium state of matter, Floquet symmetry-protected topological phases, which are implemented through digital quantum simulation with an array of programmable superconducting qubits. We observe robust long-lived temporal correlations and subharmonic temporal response for the edge spins over up to 40 driving cycles using a circuit of depth exceeding 240 and acting on 26 qubits. We demonstrate that the subharmonic response is independent of the initial state, and experimentally map out a phase boundary between the Floquet symmetry-protected topological and thermal phases. Our results establish a versatile digital simulation approach to exploring exotic non-equilibrium phases of matter with current noisy intermediate-scale quantum processors(21).

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