Physical Review X (Apr 2025)

Probing Many-Body Bell Correlation Depth with Superconducting Qubits

  • Ke Wang,
  • Weikang Li,
  • Shibo Xu,
  • Mengyao Hu,
  • Jiachen Chen,
  • Yaozu Wu,
  • Chuanyu Zhang,
  • Feitong Jin,
  • Xuhao Zhu,
  • Yu Gao,
  • Ziqi Tan,
  • Zhengyi Cui,
  • Aosai Zhang,
  • Ning Wang,
  • Yiren Zou,
  • Tingting Li,
  • Fanhao Shen,
  • Jiarun Zhong,
  • Zehang Bao,
  • Zitian Zhu,
  • Zixuan Song,
  • Jinfeng Deng,
  • Hang Dong,
  • Xu Zhang,
  • Pengfei Zhang,
  • Wenjie Jiang,
  • Zhide Lu,
  • Zheng-Zhi Sun,
  • Hekang Li,
  • Qiujiang Guo,
  • Zhen Wang,
  • Patrick Emonts,
  • Jordi Tura,
  • Chao Song,
  • H. Wang,
  • Dong-Ling Deng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.15.021024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 021024

Abstract

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Quantum nonlocality describes a stronger form of quantum correlation than that of entanglement. It refutes Einstein’s belief of local realism and is among the most distinctive and enigmatic features of quantum mechanics. It is a crucial resource for achieving quantum advantages in a variety of practical applications, ranging from cryptography and certified random number generation via self-testing to machine learning. Nevertheless, the detection of nonlocality, especially in quantum many-body systems, is notoriously challenging. Here, we report an experimental certification of genuine multipartite Bell-operator correlations, which signal nonlocality in quantum many-body systems, up to 24 qubits with a fully programmable superconducting quantum processor. In particular, we employ energy as a Bell-operator correlation witness and variationally decrease the energy of a many-body system across a hierarchy of thresholds, below which an increasing Bell-operator correlation depth can be certified from experimental data. We variationally prepare the low-energy state of a two-dimensional honeycomb model with 73 qubits and certify its Bell-operator correlations by measuring an energy that surpasses the corresponding classical bound with up to 48 standard deviations. In addition, we variationally prepare a sequence of low-energy states and certify their genuine multipartite Bell-operator correlations up to 24 qubits via energies measured efficiently by parity oscillation and multiple quantum coherence techniques. Our results establish a viable approach for preparing and certifying multipartite Bell-operator correlations, which provide not only a finer benchmark beyond entanglement for quantum devices, but also a valuable guide toward exploiting multipartite Bell correlations in a wide spectrum of practical applications.