Machine learning discovery of new phases in programmable quantum simulator snapshots

arXiv:2112.10789v150 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a tool for detailed exploration of correlated quantum states of matter, though it is incremental as it combines existing unsupervised and supervised approaches.

The researchers tackled the problem of discovering new quantum phases in experimental data from programmable quantum simulators by introducing the Hybrid-CCNN method, which identified two previously undetected phases (rhombic and boundary-ordered) and characterized quantum fluctuations in a striated phase.

Machine learning has recently emerged as a promising approach for studying complex phenomena characterized by rich datasets. In particular, data-centric approaches lend to the possibility of automatically discovering structures in experimental datasets that manual inspection may miss. Here, we introduce an interpretable unsupervised-supervised hybrid machine learning approach, the hybrid-correlation convolutional neural network (Hybrid-CCNN), and apply it to experimental data generated using a programmable quantum simulator based on Rydberg atom arrays. Specifically, we apply Hybrid-CCNN to analyze new quantum phases on square lattices with programmable interactions. The initial unsupervised dimensionality reduction and clustering stage first reveals five distinct quantum phase regions. In a second supervised stage, we refine these phase boundaries and characterize each phase by training fully interpretable CCNNs and extracting the relevant correlations for each phase. The characteristic spatial weightings and snippets of correlations specifically recognized in each phase capture quantum fluctuations in the striated phase and identify two previously undetected phases, the rhombic and boundary-ordered phases. These observations demonstrate that a combination of programmable quantum simulators with machine learning can be used as a powerful tool for detailed exploration of correlated quantum states of matter.

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