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Dive into the research topics where Jacob Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacob Smith.


Nature | 2014

Non-local propagation of correlations in quantum systems with long-range interactions

Philip Richerme; Zhe-Xuan Gong; Aaron M. Lee; Crystal Senko; Jacob Smith; Michael Foss-Feig; Spyridon Michalakis; Alexey V. Gorshkov; C. Monroe

The maximum speed with which information can propagate in a quantum many-body system directly affects how quickly disparate parts of the system can become correlated and how difficult the system will be to describe numerically. For systems with only short-range interactions, Lieb and Robinson derived a constant-velocity bound that limits correlations to within a linear effective ‘light cone’. However, little is known about the propagation speed in systems with long-range interactions, because analytic solutions rarely exist and because the best long-range bound is too loose to accurately describe the relevant dynamical timescales for any known spin model. Here we apply a variable-range Ising spin chain Hamiltonian and a variable-range XY spin chain Hamiltonian to a far-from-equilibrium quantum many-body system and observe its time evolution. For several different interaction ranges, we determine the spatial and time-dependent correlations, extract the shape of the light cone and measure the velocity with which correlations propagate through the system. This work opens the possibility for studying a wide range of many-body dynamics in quantum systems that are otherwise intractable.The maximum speed with which information can propagate in a quantum many-body system directly affects how quickly disparate parts of the system can become correlated [1–4] and how difficult the system will be to describe numerically [5]. For systems with only short-range interactions, Lieb and Robinson derived a constant-velocity bound that limits correlations to within a linear effective light cone [6]. However, little is known about the propagation speed in systems with long-range interactions, since the best long-range bound [7] is too loose to give the correct light-cone shape for any known spin model and since analytic solutions rarely exist. In this work, we experimentally determine the spatial and time-dependent correlations of a far-from-equilibrium quantum many-body system evolving under a long-range Isingor XY-model Hamiltonian. For several different interaction ranges, we extract the shape of the light cone and measure the velocity with which correlations propagate through the system. In many cases we find increasing propagation velocities, which violate the Lieb-Robinson prediction, and in one instance cannot be explained by any existing theory. Our results demonstrate that even modestly-sized quantum simulators are well-poised for studying complicated many-body systems that are intractable to classical computation.


Nature Physics | 2016

Many-body localization in a quantum simulator with programmable random disorder

Jacob Smith; Aaron M. Lee; Philip Richerme; B. Neyenhuis; Paul Hess; Philipp Hauke; Markus Heyl; David A. Huse; C. Monroe

Interacting quantum systems are expected to thermalize, but in some situations in the presence of disorder they can exist in localized states instead. This many-body localization is studied experimentally in a small system with programmable disorder. When a system thermalizes it loses all memory of its initial conditions. Even within a closed quantum system, subsystems usually thermalize using the rest of the system as a heat bath. Exceptions to quantum thermalization have been observed, but typically require inherent symmetries1,2 or noninteracting particles in the presence of static disorder3,4,5,6. However, for strong interactions and high excitation energy there are cases, known as many-body localization (MBL), where disordered quantum systems can fail to thermalize7,8,9,10. We experimentally generate MBL states by applying an Ising Hamiltonian with long-range interactions and programmable random disorder to ten spins initialized far from equilibrium. Using experimental and numerical methods we observe the essential signatures of MBL: initial-state memory retention, Poissonian distributed energy level spacings, and evidence of long-time entanglement growth. Our platform can be scaled to more spins, where a detailed modelling of MBL becomes impossible.


Science | 2013

Emergence and Frustration of Magnetism with Variable-Range Interactions in a Quantum Simulator

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.


Physical Review A | 2013

Experimental performance of a quantum simulator: Optimizing adiabatic evolution and identifying many-body ground states

Philip Richerme; Crystal Senko; Jacob Smith; Aaron M. Lee; Simcha Korenblit; C. Monroe

We use local adiabatic evolution to experimentally create and determine the ground state spin ordering of a fully-connected Ising model with up to 14 spins. Local adiabatic evolution -- in which the system evolution rate is a function of the instantaneous energy gap -- is found to maximize the ground state probability compared with other adiabatic methods while only requiring knowledge of the lowest


Science Advances | 2017

Observation of prethermalization in long-range interacting spin chains

B. Neyenhuis; Jiehang Zhang; Paul Hess; Jacob Smith; A. Lee; Phil Richerme; Zhe-Xuan Gong; Alexey V. Gorshkov; C. Monroe

sim N


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Quantum Catalysis of Magnetic Phase Transitions in a Quantum Simulator

Philip Richerme; Crystal Senko; Simcha Korenblit; Jacob Smith; Aaron M. Lee; Rajibul Islam; Wesley C. Campbell; C. Monroe

of the


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2017

Non-thermalization in trapped atomic ion spin chains

Paul Hess; Patrick Becker; Harvey Kaplan; A. Kyprianidis; A. Lee; B. Neyenhuis; G. Pagano; Philip Richerme; C. Senko; Jacob Smith; Wen Lin Tan; Jiehang Zhang; C. Monroe

2^N


Physical Review A | 2016

Engineering large Stark shifts for control of individual clock state qubits

A. Lee; Jacob Smith; Philip Richerme; B. Neyenhuis; Paul Hess; Jiehang Zhang; C. Monroe

Hamiltonian eigenvalues. We also demonstrate that the ground state ordering can be experimentally identified as the most probable of all possible spin configurations, even when the evolution is highly non-adiabatic.


Optics Letters | 2014

Beat note stabilization of mode-locked lasers for quantum information processing

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

Many-body interactions could lead to quantum thermalization, but long-range interactions provide an alternative. Although statistical mechanics describes thermal equilibrium states, these states may or may not emerge dynamically for a subsystem of an isolated quantum many-body system. For instance, quantum systems that are near-integrable usually fail to thermalize in an experimentally realistic time scale, and instead relax to quasi-stationary prethermal states that can be described by statistical mechanics, when approximately conserved quantities are included in a generalized Gibbs ensemble (GGE). We experimentally study the relaxation dynamics of a chain of up to 22 spins evolving under a long-range transverse-field Ising Hamiltonian following a sudden quench. For sufficiently long-range interactions, the system relaxes to a new type of prethermal state that retains a strong memory of the initial conditions. However, the prethermal state in this case cannot be described by a standard GGE; it rather arises from an emergent double-well potential felt by the spin excitations. This result shows that prethermalization occurs in a broader context than previously thought, and reveals new challenges for a generic understanding of the thermalization of quantum systems, particularly in the presence of long-range interactions.


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Realization of Quantum Integer-Spin Chains with Controllable Interactions

Paul Hess; Philip Richerme; Crystal Senko; Jacob Smith; Aaron M. Lee; Itsik Cohen; Alex Retzker; C. Monroe

We control quantum fluctuations to create the ground state magnetic phases of a classical Ising model with a tunable longitudinal magnetic field using a system of 6 to 10 atomic ion spins. Because of the long-range Ising interactions, the various ground state spin configurations are separated by multiple first-order phase transitions, which in our zero temperature system cannot be driven by thermal fluctuations. We instead use a transverse magnetic field as a quantum catalyst to observe the first steps of the complete fractal devils staircase, which emerges in the thermodynamic limit and can be mapped to a large number of many-body and energy-optimization problems.

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Aaron M. Lee

University of Cambridge

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A. Lee

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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B. Neyenhuis

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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C. Senko

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Jiehang Zhang

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Rajibul Islam

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Simcha Korenblit

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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