Physical Review X (May 2023)
Quantum Simulations of Interacting Systems with Broken Time-Reversal Symmetry
Abstract
Many-body systems of quantum interacting particles in which time-reversal symmetry is broken give rise to a variety of rich collective behaviors and are, therefore, a major target of research in modern physics. Quantum simulators can potentially be used to explore and understand such systems, which are often beyond the computational reach of classical simulation. Of these, platforms with universal quantum control can experimentally access a wide range of physical properties. However, simultaneously achieving strong programmable interactions, strong time-reversal symmetry breaking, and high-fidelity quantum control in a scalable manner is challenging. Here, we realize quantum simulations of interacting, time-reversal-broken quantum systems in a universal trapped-ion quantum processor. Using a recently proposed, scalable scheme, we implement time-reversal-breaking synthetic gauge fields, shown for the first time in a trapped-ion chain, along with unique coupling geometries, potentially extendable to simulation of multidimensional systems. Our high-fidelity single-site resolution in control and measurement, along with highly programmable interactions, allow us to perform full state tomography of a ground state showcasing persistent current and to observe dynamics of a time-reversal-broken system with nontrivial interactions. Our results open a path toward simulation of time-reversal-broken many-body systems with a wide range of features and coupling geometries.