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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Superconducting Qubits Quantum Simulation

Superconducting pairing correlations on a trapped-ion quantum computer

arXiv
Authors: Etienne Granet, Sheng-Hsuan Lin, Kevin Hémery, Reza Haghshenas, Pablo Andres-Martinez, David T. Stephen, Anthony Ransford, Jake Arkinstall, M. S. Allman, Pete Campora, Samuel F. Cooper, Robert D. Delaney, Joan M. Dreiling, Brian Estey, Caroline Figgatt, Cameron Foltz, John P. Gaebler, Alex Hall, Ali Husain, Akhil Isanaka, Colin J. Kennedy, Nikhil Kotibhaskar, Ivaylo S. Madjarov, Michael Mills, Alistair R. Milne, Annie J. Park, Adam P. Reed, Brian Neyenhuis, Justin G. Bohnet, Michael Foss-Feig, Andrew C. Potter, Ramil Nigmatullin, Mohsin Iqbal, Henrik Dreyer

Year

2025

Paper ID

17680

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

165

Citations

N/A

Abstract

The Fermi-Hubbard model is the starting point for the simulation of many strongly correlated materials, including high-temperature superconductors, whose modelling is a key motivation for the construction of quantum simulation and computing devices. However, the detection of superconducting pairing correlations has so far remained out of reach, both because of their off-diagonal character - which makes them inaccessible to local density measurements - and because of the difficulty of preparing superconducting states. Here, we report measurement of significant pairing correlations in three different regimes of Fermi-Hubbard models simulated on Quantinuum's Helios trapped-ion quantum computer. Specifically, we measure non-equilibrium pairing induced by an electromagnetic field in the half-filled square lattice model, d-wave pairing in an approximate ground state of the checkerboard Hubbard model at 1/6-doping, and s-wave pairing in a bilayer model relevant to nickelate superconductors. These results show that a quantum computer can reliably create and probe physically relevant states with superconducting pairing correlations, opening a path to the exploration of superconductivity with quantum computers.

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  • This paper contributes to the Quantum Simulation research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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  • The Fermi-Hubbard model is the starting point for the simulation of many strongly correlated materials, including high-temperature superconductors, whose modelling is a key...

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