Digital Simulation of Non-Hermitian Knotted Bands on Quantum Hardware
Abstract
Knots and links represent a fundamental motif of non-local connectivity that permeates the physical sciences from string theory to protein folds. While spectral braiding has been explored in two-band non-Hermitian models across various platforms, its direct simulation and characterization on programmable quantum hardware, particularly beyond two strands, remains a formidable challenge due to the limitations of variational optimization in these systems. Here, we introduce a family of non-Hermitia...
Description / Details
Knots and links represent a fundamental motif of non-local connectivity that permeates the physical sciences from string theory to protein folds. While spectral braiding has been explored in two-band non-Hermitian models across various platforms, its direct simulation and characterization on programmable quantum hardware, particularly beyond two strands, remains a formidable challenge due to the limitations of variational optimization in these systems. Here, we introduce a family of non-Hermitian multi-band twister models and implement a non-variational protocol to characterize their complex braided band structures on a programmable superconducting quantum processor. By mapping the winding of eigenstates to the spectral topology, we devise an efficient measurement strategy that extracts braid information, including braid words and knot invariants like the Alexander and Jones polynomials, without requiring full spectral tomography or repeated optimization. We experimentally demonstrate the reconstruction of complicated knots and links such as the Hopf chain and Solomon's knot. Our approach provides a general framework for investigating exotic non-Hermitian topology on near-term quantum devices, opening a route to simulate more sophisticated topological structures in knot theory.
Source: arXiv:2604.26914v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.26914v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.26914v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.26914v1
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Apr 30, 2026
Quantum Computing
Quantum Physics
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