The evolution of a quantum system interacting with an environment can be described as a unitary process acting on both the system and the environment. In this framework, the system's evolution can be predicted by tracing out the environmental degrees of freedom. Here, we establish a precise mapping between the global unitary dynamics and the quantum operation involving the system, wherein the system is a single qubit, and the environment is modeled as a discrete lattice space. This approach enables the implementation of arbitrary noise operations on single-polarization qubits using a minimal set of three liquid-crystal metasurfaces, whose transverse distribution of the optic axes can be patterned to reproduce the target process. We experimentally validate this method by simulating common noise processes, such as phase errors and depolarization. Besides providing a practical solution for quantum state purification, this work demonstrates a versatile approach for the simulation of open qubit dynamics, with potential implications for quantum error correction and environment-induced quantum phase transitions.
Engineering qubit dynamics in open systems with photonic synthetic lattices / Di Colandrea, F.; Jaouni, T.; Grace, J.; Paneru, D.; Arienzo, M.; D'Errico, A.; Karimi, E.. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW RESEARCH. - ISSN 2643-1564. - 7:2(2025). [10.1103/PhysRevResearch.7.023236]
Engineering qubit dynamics in open systems with photonic synthetic lattices
Di Colandrea F.
Primo
;Paneru D.;Arienzo M.;Karimi E.
2025
Abstract
The evolution of a quantum system interacting with an environment can be described as a unitary process acting on both the system and the environment. In this framework, the system's evolution can be predicted by tracing out the environmental degrees of freedom. Here, we establish a precise mapping between the global unitary dynamics and the quantum operation involving the system, wherein the system is a single qubit, and the environment is modeled as a discrete lattice space. This approach enables the implementation of arbitrary noise operations on single-polarization qubits using a minimal set of three liquid-crystal metasurfaces, whose transverse distribution of the optic axes can be patterned to reproduce the target process. We experimentally validate this method by simulating common noise processes, such as phase errors and depolarization. Besides providing a practical solution for quantum state purification, this work demonstrates a versatile approach for the simulation of open qubit dynamics, with potential implications for quantum error correction and environment-induced quantum phase transitions.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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