Strongly correlated quantum walks with a 12-qubit superconducting processor

Zhiguang Yan(University of Science and Technology of China), Yu-Ran Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ming Gong(University of Science and Technology of China), Yulin Wu(University of Science and Technology of China), Yarui Zheng(University of Science and Technology of China), Shaowei Li(University of Science and Technology of China), Can Wang(University of Science and Technology of China), Futian Liang(University of Science and Technology of China), Jin Lin(University of Science and Technology of China), Yu Xu(University of Science and Technology of China), Cheng Guo(University of Science and Technology of China), Lihua Sun(University of Science and Technology of China), Cheng-Zhi Peng(University of Science and Technology of China), Keyu Xia(RIKEN), Huiqiu Deng(University of Science and Technology of China), Hao Rong(University of Science and Technology of China), J. Q. You(Beijing Computational Science Research Center), Franco Nori(University of Michigan), Heng Fan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaobo Zhu(University of Science and Technology of China), Jian-Wei Pan(University of Science and Technology of China)
Science
May 2, 2019
Cited by 270

Abstract

Quantum walks are the quantum analogs of classical random walks, which allow for the simulation of large-scale quantum many-body systems and the realization of universal quantum computation without time-dependent control. We experimentally demonstrate quantum walks of one and two strongly correlated microwave photons in a one-dimensional array of 12 superconducting qubits with short-range interactions. First, in one-photon quantum walks, we observed the propagation of the density and correlation of the quasiparticle excitation of the superconducting qubit and quantum entanglement between qubit pairs. Second, when implementing two-photon quantum walks by exciting two superconducting qubits, we observed the fermionization of strongly interacting photons from the measured time-dependent long-range anticorrelations, representing the antibunching of photons with attractive interactions. The demonstration of quantum walks on a quantum processor, using superconducting qubits as artificial atoms and tomographic readout, paves the way to quantum simulation of many-body phenomena and universal quantum computation.


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