Publication
Nature Physics
Paper

Quantum hardware simulating four-dimensional inelastic neutron scattering

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Abstract

Magnetic molecules, modelled as finite-size spin systems, are test-beds for quantum phenomena 1 and could constitute key elements in future spintronics devices 2–5 , long-lasting nanoscale memories 6 or noise-resilient quantum computing platforms 7–10 . Inelastic neutron scattering is the technique of choice to probe them, characterizing molecular eigenstates on atomic scales 11–14 . However, although large magnetic molecules can be controllably synthesized 15–18 , simulating their dynamics and interpreting spectroscopic measurements is challenging because of the exponential scaling of the required resources on a classical computer. Here, we show that quantum computers 19–22 have the potential to efficiently extract dynamical correlations and the associated magnetic neutron cross-section by simulating prototypical spin systems on a quantum hardware 22 . We identify the main gate errors and show the potential scalability of our approach. The synergy between developments in neutron scattering and quantum processors will help design spin clusters for future applications.