@article {2532, title = {Quantum Simulators: Architectures and Opportunities}, year = {2019}, month = {12/14/2019}, abstract = {

Quantum simulators are a promising technology on the spectrum of quantum devices from specialized quantum experiments to universal quantum computers. These quantum devices utilize entanglement and many-particle behaviors to explore and solve hard scientific, engineering, and computational problems. Rapid development over the last two decades has produced more than 300 quantum simulators in operation worldwide using a wide variety of experimental platforms. Recent advances in several physical architectures promise a golden age of quantum simulators ranging from highly optimized special purpose simulators to flexible programmable devices. These developments have enabled a convergence of ideas drawn from fundamental physics, computer science, and device engineering. They have strong potential to address problems of societal importance, ranging from understanding vital chemical processes, to enabling the design of new materials with enhanced performance, to solving complex computational problems. It is the position of the community, as represented by participants of the NSF workshop on \"Programmable Quantum Simulators,\" that investment in a national quantum simulator program is a high priority in order to accelerate the progress in this field and to result in the first practical applications of quantum machines. Such a program should address two areas of emphasis: (1) support for creating quantum simulator prototypes usable by the broader scientific community, complementary to the present universal quantum computer effort in industry; and (2) support for fundamental research carried out by a blend of multi-investigator, multi-disciplinary collaborations with resources for quantum simulator software, hardware, and education.\ 

}, url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.06938}, author = {Ehud Altman and Kenneth R. Brown and Giuseppe Carleo and Lincoln D. Carr and Eugene Demler and Cheng Chin and Brian DeMarco and Sophia E. Economou and Mark A. Eriksson and Kai-Mei C. Fu and Markus Greiner and Kaden R. A. Hazzard and Randall G. Hulet and Alicia J. Koll{\'a}r and Benjamin L. Lev and Mikhail D. Lukin and Ruichao Ma and Xiao Mi and Shashank Misra and Christopher Monroe and Kater Murch and Zaira Nazario and Kang-Kuen Ni and Andrew C. Potter and Pedram Roushan} } @article {1501, title = {Adiabatic preparation of many-body states in optical lattices}, journal = {Physical Review A}, volume = {81}, year = {2010}, month = {2010/6/22}, abstract = { We analyze a technique for the preparation of low entropy many body states of atoms in optical lattices based on adiabatic passage. In particular, we show that this method allows preparation of strongly correlated states as stable highest energy states of Hamiltonians that have trivial ground states. As an example, we analyze the generation of antiferromagnetically ordered states by adiabatic change of a staggered field acting on the spins of bosonic atoms with ferromagnetic interactions. }, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevA.81.061603}, url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/0906.2567v3}, author = {Anders S. Sorensen and Ehud Altman and Michael Gullans and J. V. Porto and Mikhail D. Lukin and Eugene Demler} }