Simulation of Quantum Many-Body Dynamics for Generic Strongly-Interacting Systems

POSTER

Abstract

Recent experimental advances have enabled the bottom-up assembly of complex, strongly interacting quantum many-body systems from individual atoms, ions, molecules and photons. These advances open the door to studying dynamics in isolated quantum systems as well as the possibility of realizing novel out-of-equilibrium phases of matter. Numerical studies provide insight into these systems; however, computational time and memory usage limit common numerical methods such as exact diagonalization to relatively small Hilbert spaces of dimension $\sim2^{15}$. Here we present progress toward a new software package for dynamical time evolution of large generic quantum systems on massively parallel computing architectures. By projecting large sparse Hamiltonians into a much smaller Krylov subspace, we are able to compute the evolution of strongly interacting systems with Hilbert space dimension nearing $2^{30}$. We discuss and benchmark different design implementations, such as matrix-free methods and GPU based calculations, using both pre-thermal time crystals and the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model as examples. We also include a simple symbolic language to describe generic Hamiltonians, allowing simulation of diverse quantum systems without any modification of the underlying C and Fortran code.

Authors

  • Gregory D. Meyer

    University of California -- Berkeley, University of California - Berkeley

  • Francisco Machado

    University of California -- Berkeley, University of California - Berkeley

  • Norman Yao

    Univ of California - Berkeley, University of California -- Berkeley, University of California - Berkeley, UC Berkeley