E.E. Edwards
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Featured researches published by E.E. Edwards.
Nature | 2010
Kihwan Kim; Ming-Shien Chang; Simcha Korenblit; Rajibul Islam; E.E. Edwards; J. K. Freericks; Guin-Dar Lin; Lu-Ming Duan; C. Monroe
A network is frustrated when competing interactions between nodes prevent each bond from being satisfied. This compromise is central to the behaviour of many complex systems, from social and neural networks to protein folding and magnetism. Frustrated networks have highly degenerate ground states, with excess entropy and disorder even at zero temperature. In the case of quantum networks, frustration can lead to massively entangled ground states, underpinning exotic materials such as quantum spin liquids and spin glasses. Here we realize a quantum simulation of frustrated Ising spins in a system of three trapped atomic ions, whose interactions are precisely controlled using optical forces. We study the ground state of this system as it adiabatically evolves from a transverse polarized state, and observe that frustration induces extra degeneracy. We also measure the entanglement in the system, finding a link between frustration and ground-state entanglement. This experimental system can be scaled to simulate larger numbers of spins, the ground states of which (for frustrated interactions) cannot be simulated on a classical computer.
Science | 2013
Rajibul Islam; C. Senko; Wesley C. Campbell; Simcha Korenblit; Jacob Smith; A. Lee; E.E. Edwards; C.-C. J. Wang; J. K. Freericks; C. Monroe
Magnetic Frustration The study of magnetic frustration has a long history in solid-state physics, but cold-atom systems now offer the possibility of simulating the problem with exquisite control. Islam et al. (p. 583) study a system of 16 trapped ions, using the Coulomb interactions between the ions to simulate exchange interactions present in magnetic systems. The measured spin correlations provide a window into the behavior of the system, as the effective magnetic field and the range of the interactions are tuned. Coulomb interactions in a system of 16 trapped ions are used to simulate magnetism with varying degrees of frustration. Frustration, or the competition between interacting components of a network, is often responsible for the emergent complexity of many-body systems. For instance, frustrated magnetism is a hallmark of poorly understood systems such as quantum spin liquids, spin glasses, and spin ices, whose ground states can be massively degenerate and carry high degrees of quantum entanglement. Here, we engineer frustrated antiferromagnetic interactions between spins stored in a crystal of up to 16 trapped 171Yb+ atoms. We control the amount of frustration by continuously tuning the range of interaction and directly measure spin correlation functions and their coherent dynamics. This prototypical quantum simulation points the way toward a new probe of frustrated quantum magnetism and perhaps the design of new quantum materials.
Nature Communications | 2011
Rajibul Islam; E.E. Edwards; K. Kim; S. Korenblit; Changsuk Noh; H. Carmichael; Guin-Dar Lin; L.-M. Duan; C.-C. Joseph Wang; J. K. Freericks; C. Monroe
A quantum simulator is a well-controlled quantum system that can follow the evolution of a prescribed model whose behaviour may be difficult to determine. A good example is the simulation of a set of interacting spins, where phase transitions between various spin orders can underlie poorly understood concepts such as spin liquids. Here we simulate the emergence of magnetism by implementing a fully connected non-uniform ferromagnetic quantum Ising model using up to 9 trapped (171)Yb(+) ions. By increasing the Ising coupling strengths compared with the transverse field, the crossover from paramagnetism to ferromagnetic order sharpens as the system is scaled up, prefacing the expected quantum phase transition in the thermodynamic limit. We measure scalable order parameters appropriate for large systems, such as various moments of the magnetization. As the results are theoretically tractable, this work provides a critical benchmark for the simulation of intractable arbitrary fully connected Ising models in larger systems.
New Journal of Physics | 2012
Simcha Korenblit; Dvir Kafri; Wess C. Campbell; Rajibul Islam; E.E. Edwards; Zhe-Xuan Gong; Guin-Dar Lin; Lu-Ming Duan; Jungsang Kim; Kihwan Kim; C. Monroe
A collection of trapped atomic ions represents one of the most attractive platforms for the quantum simulation of interacting spin networks and quantum magnetism. Spin-dependent optical dipole forces applied to an ion crystal create long-range effective spin–spin interactions and allow the simulation of spin Hamiltonians that possess nontrivial phases and dynamics. Here we show how the appropriate design of laser fields can provide for arbitrary multidimensional spin–spin interaction graphs even for the case of a linear spatial array of ions. This scheme uses currently available trap technology and is scalable to levels where the classical methods of simulation are intractable.
New Journal of Physics | 2011
K. Kim; Simcha Korenblit; Rajibul Islam; E.E. Edwards; M-S Chang; Changsuk Noh; H. J. Carmichael; G-D Lin; L-M Duan; C.-C. Joseph Wang; J. K. Freericks; C. Monroe
Crystals of trapped atomic ions are among the most promising platforms for the quantum simulation of many-body quantum physics. Here, we describe recent developments in the simulation of quantum magnetic spin models with trapped 171 Yb + ions, and discuss the possibility of scaling the system to a level of complexity where classical computation becomes intractable.
Physical Review B | 2010
E.E. Edwards; Simcha Korenblit; K. Kim; Rajibul Islam; Ming-Shien Chang; J. K. Freericks; Guin-Dar Lin; L.-M. Duan; C. Monroe
Abstract : We perform a quantum simulation of the Ising model with a transverse field using a collection of three trapped atomic ion spins. By adiabatically manipulating the Hamiltonian, we directly probe the ground state for a wide range of fields and form of the Ising couplings, leading to a phase diagram of magnetic order in this microscopic system. The technique is scalable to much larger numbers of trapped ion spins, where phase transitions approaching the thermodynamic limit can be studied in cases where theory becomes intractable.
Optics Letters | 2014
Rajibul Islam; Wesley C. Campbell; T. Choi; S. M. Clark; Conover Cw; Shantanu Debnath; E.E. Edwards; Fields B; D. Hayes; D. Hucul; Inlek; Johnson Kg; S. E. Korenblit; A. Lee; Lee Kw; T. A. Manning; D.N. Matsukevich; Mizrahi J; Qudsia Quraishi; C. Senko; Jacob Smith; C. Monroe
We stabilize a chosen radio frequency beat note between two optical fields derived from the same mode-locked laser pulse train in order to coherently manipulate quantum information. This scheme does not require access or active stabilization of the laser repetition rate. We implement and characterize this external lock, in the context of two-photon stimulated Raman transitions between the hyperfine ground states of trapped 171Yb(+) quantum bits.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2004
Stephen D. Williams; E.E. Edwards
Archive | 2015
Wesley C. Campbell; C. Monroe; E.E. Edwards; Rajibul Islam; Dvir Kafri; Simcha Korenblit; A. Lee; Phillip Richerme; Crystal Senko; Jacob W. Smith
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Chad Orzel; E.E. Edwards; Steven L. Rolston