Floquet engineering engineers time-hierarchical emergent local symmetries that restrict inter-sector couplings and create long-lived gauge sectors in U(1) lattice gauge theory simulations.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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2026 4verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
A trapped-ion quantum computer simulates 2+1D Z2 lattice gauge theory dynamics, revealing glueball excitations and multi-order string breaking.
Quantum simulation on trapped ions shows that a plaquette term in a 2+1D U(1) gauge theory enables string propagation in the plane and extended matter creation, realizing genuine two-dimensional dynamics.
A 1D superfluid of hard-core bosons with pair-wise attractive interactions forms molecular dimers that exhibit emergent repulsive interactions and phase separation into charge-density wave puddles, as revealed by DMRG and effective Hamiltonians.
citing papers explorer
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Protecting Quantum Simulations of Lattice Gauge Theories through Engineered Emergent Hierarchical Symmetries
Floquet engineering engineers time-hierarchical emergent local symmetries that restrict inter-sector couplings and create long-lived gauge sectors in U(1) lattice gauge theory simulations.
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Observation of glueball excitations and string breaking in a $2+1$D $\mathbb{Z}_2$ lattice gauge theory on a trapped-ion quantum computer
A trapped-ion quantum computer simulates 2+1D Z2 lattice gauge theory dynamics, revealing glueball excitations and multi-order string breaking.
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Observation of genuine $2+1$D string dynamics in a U$(1)$ lattice gauge theory with a tunable plaquette term on a trapped-ion quantum computer
Quantum simulation on trapped ions shows that a plaquette term in a 2+1D U(1) gauge theory enables string propagation in the plane and extended matter creation, realizing genuine two-dimensional dynamics.
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Emergence of a molecular quantum liquid in one dimension
A 1D superfluid of hard-core bosons with pair-wise attractive interactions forms molecular dimers that exhibit emergent repulsive interactions and phase separation into charge-density wave puddles, as revealed by DMRG and effective Hamiltonians.