Jiehang Zhang
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jiehang Zhang.
Nature | 2017
Jiehang Zhang; Paul Hess; A. Kyprianidis; Patrick Becker; A. Lee; Jacob W. Smith; G. Pagano; Ionut-Dragos Potirniche; Andrew C. Potter; Ashvin Vishwanath; Norman Yao; C. Monroe
Spontaneous symmetry breaking is a fundamental concept in many areas of physics, including cosmology, particle physics and condensed matter. An example is the breaking of spatial translational symmetry, which underlies the formation of crystals and the phase transition from liquid to solid. Using the analogy of crystals in space, the breaking of translational symmetry in time and the emergence of a ‘time crystal’ was recently proposed, but was later shown to be forbidden in thermal equilibrium. However, non-equilibrium Floquet systems, which are subject to a periodic drive, can exhibit persistent time correlations at an emergent subharmonic frequency. This new phase of matter has been dubbed a ‘discrete time crystal’. Here we present the experimental observation of a discrete time crystal, in an interacting spin chain of trapped atomic ions. We apply a periodic Hamiltonian to the system under many-body localization conditions, and observe a subharmonic temporal response that is robust to external perturbations. The observation of such a time crystal opens the door to the study of systems with long-range spatio-temporal correlations and novel phases of matter that emerge under intrinsically non-equilibrium conditions.
Nature | 2017
Jiehang Zhang; G. Pagano; Paul Hess; A. Kyprianidis; Patrick Becker; Harvey Kaplan; Alexey V. Gorshkov; Zhe-Xuan Gong; C. Monroe
A quantum simulator is a type of quantum computer that controls the interactions between quantum bits (or qubits) in a way that can be mapped to certain quantum many-body problems. As it becomes possible to exert more control over larger numbers of qubits, such simulators will be able to tackle a wider range of problems, such as materials design and molecular modelling, with the ultimate limit being a universal quantum computer that can solve general classes of hard problems. Here we use a quantum simulator composed of up to 53 qubits to study non-equilibrium dynamics in the transverse-field Ising model with long-range interactions. We observe a dynamical phase transition after a sudden change of the Hamiltonian, in a regime in which conventional statistical mechanics does not apply. The qubits are represented by the spins of trapped ions, which can be prepared in various initial pure states. We apply a global long-range Ising interaction with controllable strength and range, and measure each individual qubit with an efficiency of nearly 99 per cent. Such high efficiency means that arbitrary many-body correlations between qubits can be measured in a single shot, enabling the dynamical phase transition to be probed directly and revealing computationally intractable features that rely on the long-range interactions and high connectivity between qubits.
Science Advances | 2017
B. Neyenhuis; Jiehang Zhang; Paul Hess; Jacob Smith; A. Lee; Phil Richerme; Zhe-Xuan Gong; Alexey V. Gorshkov; 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.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2017
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
Linear arrays of trapped and laser-cooled atomic ions are a versatile platform for studying strongly interacting many-body quantum systems. Effective spins are encoded in long-lived electronic levels of each ion and made to interact through laser-mediated optical dipole forces. The advantages of experiments with cold trapped ions, including high spatio-temporal resolution, decoupling from the external environment and control over the system Hamiltonian, are used to measure quantum effects not always accessible in natural condensed matter samples. In this review, we highlight recent work using trapped ions to explore a variety of non-ergodic phenomena in long-range interacting spin models, effects that are heralded by the memory of out-of-equilibrium initial conditions. We observe long-lived memory in static magnetizations for quenched many-body localization and prethermalization, while memory is preserved in the periodic oscillations of a driven discrete time crystal state. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Breakdown of ergodicity in quantum systems: from solids to synthetic matter’.
Physical Review A | 2016
A. Lee; Jacob Smith; Philip Richerme; B. Neyenhuis; Paul Hess; Jiehang Zhang; C. Monroe
In quantum information science, the external control of qubits must be balanced with the extreme isolation of the qubits from the environment. Atomic qubit systems typically mitigate this balance through the use of gated laser fields that can create superpositions and entanglement between qubits. Here we propose the use of high-order optical Stark shifts from optical fields to manipulate the splitting of atomic qubits that are insensitive to other types of fields. We demonstrate a fourth-order AC Stark shift in a trapped atomic ion system that does not require extra laser power beyond that needed for other control fields. We individually address a chain of tightly-spaced trapped ions and show how these controlled shifts can produce an arbitrary product state of ten ions as well as generate site-specific magnetic field terms in a simulated spin Hamiltonian.
arXiv: Quantum Gases | 2018
Fangli Liu; Rex Lundgren; Paraj Titum; Guido Pagano; Jiehang Zhang; C. Monroe; Alexey V. Gorshkov
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Wen Lin Tan; Guido Pagano; Harvey Kaplan; Paul Hess; Patrick Becker; A. Kyprianidis; Jiehang Zhang; C. Monroe; Phil Richerme; Yukai Wu
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Harvey Kaplan; Guido Pagano; Wen Lin Tan; Paul Hess; Jessica Hankes; Jiehang Zhang; A. Kyprianidis; Patrick Becker; Philip Richerme; Eric Birckelbaw; Micah Hernandez; Yukai Wu; C. Monroe
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Guido Pagano; Harvey Kaplan; Wen-Lin Tan; Paul Hess; Jiehang Zhang; Eric Birckelbaw; Micah Hernandez; C. Monroe
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
A. Kyprianidis; Jiehang Zhang; Paul Hess; Patrick Becker; A. Lee; Jacob W. Smith; G. Pagano; Andrew C. Potter; Ashvin Vishwanath; Ionut-Dragos Potirniche; Norman Yao; C. Monroe