Entanglement Structure from Correlation Functions

ORAL

Abstract

Rapidly growing capabilities of quantum simulators to probe quantum many-body phenomena require new methods to characterize increasingly complex states. We present a protocol that constrains quantum states by experimentally measured correlation functions which only scales polynomially with system size. This method enables measurement of a quantum state's entanglement structure, opening a new route to study entanglement-related phenomena. Our approach extends Gaussian state parameterizations by systematically incorporating higher-order correlations. We show the protocol's usefulness in conjunction with current and forthcoming experimental capabilities, focusing on weakly interacting fermions as a proof of concept. Here, the lowest non-trivial expansion quantitatively predicts early time thermalization dynamics, including signaling the on-set of quantum chaos indicated by the entanglement Hamiltonian.

*H.F. and N.M. acknowledge funding by the DOE, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, IQuS (https://iqus.uw.edu), via the program on Quantum Horizons: QIS Research and Innovation for Nuclear Science under Award DESC0020970. This work is supported by the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation program under Grant Agreement No. 101113690 (PASQuanS2.1), the ERC Starting grant QARA (Grant No. 101041435), the EU-QUANTERA project TNiSQ (N-6001), and by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF): COE 1 and quantA.

Publication: arXiv:2407.12083

Presenters

  • Henry F Froland

    • University of Washington

Authors

  • Henry F Froland

    • University of Washington
  • Niklas Mueller

    • University of Washington
  • Torsten V Zache

    • University of Innsbruck
  • Robert Ott

    • University of Innsbruck