Quantum channel for modeling spin-motion dephasing in Rydberg chains

Jun 30, 2025·
Christopher wyenberg
Kent Ueno
Kent Ueno
,
Alexandre cooper
· 0 min read
Abstract
We introduce a quantum channel to model the dissipative dynamics resulting from the coupling between spin and motional degrees of freedom in chains of neutral atoms with Rydberg interactions. The quantum channel acts on the reduced spin state obtained under the frozen gas approximation, modulating its elements with time-dependent coefficients. These coefficients can be computed exactly in the perturbative regime, enabling efficient modeling of spin-motion dephasing in systems too large for exact methods. We benchmark the accuracy of our approach against exact diagonalization for small systems, identifying its regime of validity and the onset of perturbative breakdown. We then apply the quantum channel to compute fidelity loss during transport of single-spin excitations across extended Rydberg chains in regimes intractable via exact diagonalization. By revealing the quantum-classical crossover, these results establish a bound on the maximum chain length for efficient entanglement distribution. The quantum channel significantly reduces the complexity of simulating spin dynamics coupled to motional degrees of freedom, providing a practical tool for estimating the impact of spin-motion coupling in near-term experiments with Rydberg atom arrays.
Type
Kent Ueno
Authors
Ph.D. Candidate
My main interests lie in realizing quantum simulations of many-body dynamics to inform the development of practical quantum technologies. By capturing essential quantum behavior, quantum simulators can help narrow the search space for useful quantum phenomena in areas like chemical reaction landscapes and novel quantum materials, accelerating both understanding and application. Our team is developing a quantum simulator built from arrays of Rydberg atoms trapped in optical tweezers. I’m involved across the full stack of the experiment — from designing and building the setup to operating and characterizing the system — with the goal of performing programmable quantum simulations of many-body dynamics. Outside of research, I enjoy playing soccer, discussing films, baking, and spending time with cats. I’m just as happy to talk with you about the use-cases of quantum as I am to debate how AC Milan can get back to the top!