PRX Quantum (Oct 2021)

Gauge-Symmetry Protection Using Single-Body Terms

  • Jad C. Halimeh,
  • Haifeng Lang,
  • Julius Mildenberger,
  • Zhang Jiang,
  • Philipp Hauke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PRXQuantum.2.040311
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 4
p. 040311

Abstract

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Quantum-simulator hardware promises new insights into problems from particle and nuclear physics. A major challenge is to reproduce gauge invariance, as violations of this quintessential property of lattice gauge theories can have dramatic consequences, e.g., the generation of a photon mass in quantum electrodynamics. Here, we introduce an experimentally friendly method to protect gauge invariance in U(1) lattice gauge theories against coherent errors in a controllable way. Our method employs only single-body energy-penalty terms, thus enabling practical implementations. As we derive analytically, some sets of penalty coefficients render undesired gauge sectors inaccessible by unitary dynamics for exponentially long times. Further, for few-body error terms, we show numerically that this is achieved with resources exhibiting little dependence on system size. These findings constitute an exponential improvement over previously known results from energy-gap protection or perturbative treatments. In our method, the gauge-invariant subspace is protected by an emergent global symmetry, meaning it can be immediately applied to other symmetries. In our numerical benchmarks for continuous-time and digital quantum simulations, gauge protection holds for all calculated evolution times (up to t>10^{10}/J for continuous time, with J the relevant energy scale). Crucially, our gauge-protection technique is simpler to realize than the associated ideal gauge theory, and can thus be readily implemented in current ultracold-atom analog simulators as well as digital noisy intermediate-scale quantum devices.