Christopher Lutz, Gregory Czap
APS March Meeting 2024
Investigating the interplay of dualities, generalized symmetries, and topological defects beyond theoretical models is an important challenge in condensed matter physics and quantum materials. A simple model exhibiting this physics is the transverse-field Ising model, which can host a noninvertible topological defect that performs the Kramers-Wannier duality transformation. When acting on one point in space, this duality defect imposes the duality twisted boundary condition and binds a single Majorana zero mode. This Majorana zero mode is unusual as it lacks localized partners and has an infinite lifetime, even in finite systems. Using Floquet driving of a closed Ising chain with a duality defect, we generate this Majorana zero mode in a digital quantum computer. We detect the mode by measuring its associated persistent autocorrelation function using an efficient sampling protocol and a compound strategy for error mitigation. We also show that the Majorana zero mode resides at the domain wall between two regions related by a Kramers-Wannier duality. Finally, we highlight the robustness of the isolated Majorana zero mode to integrability and symmetry-breaking perturbations. Our findings offer an approach to investigating exotic topological defects in digitized quantum devices.
*US National Science Foundation under Grants NSF DMR-1945395
Christopher Lutz, Gregory Czap
APS March Meeting 2024
Blake Johnson
APS March Meeting 2024
Itay Griniasty, David Hathcock, et al.
APS March Meeting 2024
Norhan M Eassa, Jeffrey Cohn, et al.
APS March Meeting 2022