Stable Topology in Exactly Flat Bands
2603.09609 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cond-mat.str-el | PDF
Stable Topology in Exactly Flat Bands
2603.09609 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cond-mat.str-el | PDF
Topological flat bands (FBs) offer an ideal platform for realizing exotic topological phases, such as fractional Chern insulators, yet their realization with both exact flatness and stable topology in local lattice models has been long hindered by fundamental no-go theorems. Here, we overcome this barrier by demonstrating the existence of critical topological FBs (CTFBs) in finite-range hopping models. They saturate the no-go theorems via a unique structure of Bloch wavefunctions: While continuous over the whole Brillouin zone, the wavefunctions are non-analytic at isolated band touching points, thereby relaxing the inherent restrictions on the coexistence of exact flatness and stable topology. We establish a general principle to construct CTFBs, as well as their parent Hamiltonians, that carry desired topological invariants in given space groups. Explicit examples exhibiting Chern numbers, strong index, and crystalline-symmetry-protected invariants in two and three dimensions are provided. Furthermore, an automated algorithm identifies more than 50,000 robust, symmetry-indicated CTFBs. Filling such CTFBs yields short-range entangled topological states that exhibit power-law correlations. Crucially, all filled CTFB states admit exact tensor-network representations with finite bond dimensions, providing a tractable starting point for exploring strongly correlated topological matter.
Onset of Ergodicity Across Scales on a Digital Quantum Processor
2603.09567 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | quant-ph cond-mat.dis-nn | PDF
Onset of Ergodicity Across Scales on a Digital Quantum Processor
2603.09567 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | quant-ph cond-mat.dis-nn | PDF
Understanding how isolated quantum many-body systems thermalize remains a central question in modern physics. We study the onset of ergodicity in a two-dimensional disordered Heisenberg Floquet model using digital quantum simulation on IBM's Nighthawk superconducting processor, reaching system sizes of up to qubits. We probe ergodicity across different length scales by coarse-graining the system into spatial patches of varying sizes and introducing a measure based on the collision entropy of each patch, enabling a detailed study of when ergodic behavior emerges across scales. The high sampling rate of superconducting quantum processing units, together with an optimal sample estimator, allow us to access patches of sizes up to . We observe that as the Heisenberg coupling increases, the noiseless system undergoes a smooth crossover from subergodic to ergodic behavior, with smaller patches approaching their random-matrix-theory values first, thereby revealing a hierarchy across scales. In the region of parameter space where classical tensor-network simulations are reliable, small patches or small values of , we find excellent agreement with the error-mitigated quantum simulation. Beyond this regime, volume-law entanglement and contraction complexity growth causes the cost of classical methods to rise sharply. Our results open new directions for the use of quantum computers in the study of quantum thermalization.
Kinetic obstruction to pairing in the doped Kitaev-Heisenberg ladder
2603.08650 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cond-mat.str-el cond-mat.supr-con | PDF
Kinetic obstruction to pairing in the doped Kitaev-Heisenberg ladder
2603.08650 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cond-mat.str-el cond-mat.supr-con | PDF
We investigate the hole-doped Kitaev-Heisenberg (--) model on a two-leg ladder geometry using the density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG). We first consider the behavior of the antiferromagnetic Kitaev (AFK) spin-liquid phase as a function of hopping strength and doping level. This reveals intriguing pairing tendencies only for , consistent with prior results on three-leg ladders, and firmly supports the emerging picture that the physics of doped Kitaev spin liquids strongly depends on the kinetic energy of the doped holes. Analysis of one- and two-hole doping uncovers close links between the spatial profiles of the plaquette operator and the charge density. We construct a doping-dependent phase diagram for antiferromagnetic Heisenberg interactions and intermediate hopping . Upon doping, the rung-singlet region develops dominant superconducting correlations. Charge-density-wave correlations dominate at weak doping near the transition to the stripy phase. Spin-density wave-like behavior is found in the AFK and ferromagnetic Kitaev limits, and in the stripy phase.
Schwinger Model with a Dynamical Axion
2603.10755 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | hep-ph cond-mat.quant-gas hep-lat hep-th nucl-th | PDF
Schwinger Model with a Dynamical Axion
2603.10755 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | hep-ph cond-mat.quant-gas hep-lat hep-th nucl-th | PDF
One of the major open puzzles in the Standard Model of particle physics is the strong CP problem: although Quantum Chromodynamics allows a CP-violating topological -term, experiments constrain its value to be extremely small. The Peccei--Quinn mechanism resolves this problem by promoting the -angle to a dynamical field-introducing the axion -- whose dynamics relax the effective angle to a CP-conserving minimum. Here, we investigate the resulting axion physics in a Hamiltonian lattice gauge theory (LGT) by coupling a quantized axion field to the massive Schwinger model with a topological -term. Using infinite matrix product state techniques, we compute the ground-state properties of the resulting theory and demonstrate that the axion dynamically relaxes to the minimum of the vacuum energy. Consequently, the ground-state energy becomes independent of , demonstrating the axion-mediated solution to the strong CP problem within a fully dynamical LGT. We further analyze CP restoration and extract the axion mass from the topological susceptibility and excitation spectrum. Our results provide a nonperturbative demonstration of axion dynamics in a quantum LGT amenable to investigation on modern quantum hardware.
Compactifying the Electronic Wavefunction II: Quantum Estimators for Spin-Coupled Generalized Valence Bond Wavefunctions
2603.06840 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | quant-ph cond-mat.str-el physics.chem-ph | PDF
Compactifying the Electronic Wavefunction II: Quantum Estimators for Spin-Coupled Generalized Valence Bond Wavefunctions
2603.06840 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | quant-ph cond-mat.str-el physics.chem-ph | PDF
We present a measurement-driven quantum framework for evaluating overlap and Hamiltonian matrix elements in spin-coupled generalized valence bond (SCGVB) wavefunctions. The approach targets a central difficulty of nonorthogonal valence-bond methods: estimating matrix elements between distinct, generally nonorthogonal configuration state functions. Rather than preparing the full wavefunction on quantum hardware, we reformulate the required quantities as vacuum expectation values of Pauli-string operators that can be accessed using shallow, ancilla-free circuits composed of local Clifford rotations and computational-basis measurements. In contrast to Hadamard-test-based matrix-element estimation, this construction avoids ancilla qubits and controlled operations by reducing the problem to local Pauli measurements. This separates the algebraic construction of the SCGVB problem from the measurement task executed on the quantum register and yields a low-depth strategy compatible with near-term architectures. We demonstrate the framework on square and rectangular H4 using quantum-circuit emulation, where the resulting overlap and Hamiltonian matrices reproduce classical Lowdin-based references with good accuracy across the geometries considered, and where derived Coulson-Chirgwin weights remain chemically consistent. These results support the feasibility of measurement-based quantum assistance for nonorthogonal SCGVB expansions and provide a practical route for incorporating quantum measurements into valence-bond electronic-structure workflows.
Efficient Generative Modeling with Unitary Matrix Product States Using Riemannian Optimization
2603.12026 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cs.LG | PDF
Efficient Generative Modeling with Unitary Matrix Product States Using Riemannian Optimization
2603.12026 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cs.LG | PDF
Tensor networks, which are originally developed for characterizing complex quantum many-body systems, have recently emerged as a powerful framework for capturing high-dimensional probability distributions with strong physical interpretability. This paper systematically studies matrix product states (MPS) for generative modeling and shows that unitary MPS, which is a tensor-network architecture that is both simple and expressive, offers clear benefits for unsupervised learning by reducing ambiguity in parameter updates and improving efficiency. To overcome the inefficiency of standard gradient-based MPS training, we develop a Riemannian optimization approach that casts probabilistic modeling as an optimization problem with manifold constraints, and further derive an efficient space-decoupling algorithm. Experiments on Bars-and-Stripes and EMNIST datasets demonstrate fast adaptation to data structure, stable updates, and strong performance while maintaining the efficiency and expressive power of MPS.
Quantum synchronization and chimera states in a programmable quantum many-body system
2603.11009 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | quant-ph cond-mat.stat-mech cond-mat.str-el | PDF
Quantum synchronization and chimera states in a programmable quantum many-body system
2603.11009 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | quant-ph cond-mat.stat-mech cond-mat.str-el | PDF
Synchronization is a hallmark of collective behavior in classical nonlinear systems, yet its realization as a robust many-body phenomenon in coherent quantum systems remains largely unexplored. Here we demonstrate symmetry-protected quantum synchronization and a quantum chimera state in coherent Floquet dynamics on programmable superconducting quantum processors. By implementing stroboscopic evolution of a two-dimensional Heisenberg model on IBM heavy-hex devices, we observe that initially phase-randomized spins spontaneously self-organize into coherent lattice-wide oscillations. On 28 qubits, synchronization persists even for strongly randomized initial states and is stabilized by SU(2) symmetry, as confirmed by explicit symmetry breaking. Scaling up to 156 qubits reveals a qualitatively distinct regime. For weak initial randomness, global synchronization extends across the device. For strong randomness, the system fails to synchronize globally, yet subsets of qubits exhibit robust local phase coherence under homogeneous unitary dynamics. This coexistence of globally desynchronized and locally synchronized regions constitutes a quantum analogue of a classical chimera state. Statevector and matrix-product-state simulations reproduce both the symmetry-protected synchronization and the chimera coexistence, demonstrating that these phenomena arise from the intrinsic Floquet many-body dynamics. Our results establish symmetry-protected synchronization and quantum chimera states as experimentally accessible nonequilibrium dynamical phases in programable many-body quantum systems.
Coupling Tensor Trains with Graph of Convex Sets: Effective Compression, Exploration, and Planning in the C-Space
2603.06764 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cs.RO | PDF
Coupling Tensor Trains with Graph of Convex Sets: Effective Compression, Exploration, and Planning in the C-Space
2603.06764 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cs.RO | PDF
We present TANGO (Tensor ANd Graph Optimization), a novel motion planning framework that integrates tensor-based compression with structured graph optimization to enable efficient and scalable trajectory generation. While optimization-based planners such as the Graph of Convex Sets (GCS) offer powerful tools for generating smooth, optimal trajectories, they typically rely on a predefined convex characterization of the high-dimensional configuration space-a requirement that is often intractable for general robotic tasks. TANGO builds further by using Tensor Train decomposition to approximate the feasible configuration space in a compressed form, enabling rapid discovery and estimation of task-relevant regions. These regions are then embedded into a GCS-like structure, allowing for geometry-aware motion planning that respects both system constraints and environmental complexity. By coupling tensor-based compression with structured graph reasoning, TANGO enables efficient, geometry-aware motion planning and lays the groundwork for more expressive and scalable representations of configuration space in future robotic systems. Rigorous simulation studies on planar and real robots reinforce our claims of effective compression and higher quality trajectories.
Bootstrap Embedding for Interacting Electrons in Phonon Coherent-state Mean Field
2603.11658 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cond-mat.str-el physics.comp-ph | PDF
Bootstrap Embedding for Interacting Electrons in Phonon Coherent-state Mean Field
2603.11658 | Thu Mar 12 2026 | cond-mat.str-el physics.comp-ph | PDF
We develop a fermi-bose bootstrap embedding (fb-BE) framework for the ground state of interacting elec- trons coupled to phonon mean field. The method combines bootstrap embedding for correlated electrons with a self-consistent coherent-state mean-field treatment for phonons. This method models the interacting electron-phonon problem as a system of correlated electrons traveling in a self-consistently specified potential landscape, allowing for efficient treatment of large lattice systems. Convergence of the methods for frag- ment size and total system size are demonstrated for one-dimensional Hubbard-Holstein model for up to 350 sites. Finite-size scaling is performed to extrapolate to infinite system size. Benchmarking against density matrix renormalization group for small 8-site system at half- and quarter-filling shows orders-of-magnitude runtime advantage. The comparison further reveals that the method performs best in regimes dominated by localization, such as the Mott insulating phase and the strong-coupling tiny polaron regime, where the local embedding ansatz is still valid. However, due to the mean-field treatment for phonons, we find limitations of our methods in the weakly coupled delocalized region and at the Peierls transition, where quantum phonon fluctuations and long-range kinetic correlations become substantial.