Probing entanglement in a 2D hard-core Bose–Hubbard lattice

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Abstract

Entanglement and its propagation are central to understanding many physical properties of quantum systems1–3. Notably, within closed quantum many-body systems, entanglement is believed to yield emergent thermodynamic behaviour4–7. However, a universal understanding remains challenging owing to the non-integrability and computational intractability of most large-scale quantum systems. Quantum hardware platforms provide a means to study the formation and scaling of entanglement in interacting many-body systems8–14. Here we use a controllable 4 × 4 array of superconducting qubits to emulate a 2D hard-core Bose–Hubbard (HCBH) lattice. We generate superposition states by simultaneously driving all lattice sites and extract correlation lengths and entanglement entropy across its many-body energy spectrum. We observe volume-law entanglement scaling for states at the centre of the spectrum and a crossover to the onset of area-law scaling near its edges.

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Karamlou, A. H., Rosen, I. T., Muschinske, S. E., Barrett, C. N., Di Paolo, A., Ding, L., … Oliver, W. D. (2024). Probing entanglement in a 2D hard-core Bose–Hubbard lattice. Nature, 629(8012), 561–566. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07325-z

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