Author
Listed:
- S.-A. Guo
(Tsinghua University)
- Y.-K. Wu
(Tsinghua University
Hefei National Laboratory)
- J. Ye
(Tsinghua University)
- L. Zhang
(Tsinghua University)
- W.-Q. Lian
(Ltd)
- R. Yao
(Ltd)
- Y. Wang
(Tsinghua University
Ltd)
- R.-Y. Yan
(Tsinghua University)
- Y.-J. Yi
(Tsinghua University)
- Y.-L. Xu
(Tsinghua University)
- B.-W. Li
(Ltd)
- Y.-H. Hou
(Tsinghua University)
- Y.-Z. Xu
(Tsinghua University)
- W.-X. Guo
(Ltd)
- C. Zhang
(Tsinghua University)
- B.-X. Qi
(Tsinghua University)
- Z.-C. Zhou
(Tsinghua University
Hefei National Laboratory)
- L. He
(Tsinghua University
Hefei National Laboratory)
- L.-M. Duan
(Tsinghua University
Hefei National Laboratory
New Cornerstone Science Laboratory)
Abstract
A large qubit capacity and an individual readout capability are two crucial requirements for large-scale quantum computing and simulation1. As one of the leading physical platforms for quantum information processing, the ion trap has achieved a quantum simulation of tens of ions with site-resolved readout in a one-dimensional Paul trap2–4 and of hundreds of ions with global observables in a two-dimensional (2D) Penning trap5,6. However, integrating these two features into a single system is still very challenging. Here we report the stable trapping of 512 ions in a 2D Wigner crystal and the sideband cooling of their transverse motion. We demonstrate the quantum simulation of long-range quantum Ising models with tunable coupling strengths and patterns, with or without frustration, using 300 ions. Enabled by the site resolution in the single-shot measurement, we observe rich spatial correlation patterns in the quasi-adiabatically prepared ground states, which allows us to verify quantum simulation results by comparing the measured two-spin correlations with the calculated collective phonon modes and with classical simulated annealing. We further probe the quench dynamics of the Ising model in a transverse field to demonstrate quantum sampling tasks. Our work paves the way for simulating classically intractable quantum dynamics and for running noisy intermediate-scale quantum algorithms7,8 using 2D ion trap quantum simulators.
Suggested Citation
S.-A. Guo & Y.-K. Wu & J. Ye & L. Zhang & W.-Q. Lian & R. Yao & Y. Wang & R.-Y. Yan & Y.-J. Yi & Y.-L. Xu & B.-W. Li & Y.-H. Hou & Y.-Z. Xu & W.-X. Guo & C. Zhang & B.-X. Qi & Z.-C. Zhou & L. He & L.-, 2024.
"A site-resolved two-dimensional quantum simulator with hundreds of trapped ions,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 630(8017), pages 613-618, June.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:630:y:2024:i:8017:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07459-0
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07459-0
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