The phenomenon of confinement is well known in high-energy physics and can also be realized for low-energy domain-wall excitations in one-dimensional quantum spin chains. A bound state consisting of two domain walls can behave like a meson, and recently, Vovrosh et al. [PRX Quantum 3, 040309 (2022)] demonstrated that a pair of mesons could dynamically form a metastable confinement-induced bound state (consisting of four domain walls) akin to a hadronic state. However, the protocol discussed by Vovrosh et al. involving the use of interactions with characteristically nonmonotonic distance dependence is not easy to come by in nature, thus posing a challenge for its experimental realization. In this regard, Rydberg atoms can provide the required platform for simulating confinement-related physics. We exploit the flexibility offered by interacting Rydberg-dressed atoms to engineering modified spin-spin interactions for the one-dimensional transverse-field Ising model. Our numerical simulations show how Rydberg-dressed interactions can give rise to a variety of effective potentials that are suitable for hadron formation, which opens the possibility of simulating confinement physics with Rydberg platforms as a viable alternative to current trapped-ion experiments.
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The phenomenon of confinement is well known in high-energy physics and can also be realized for low-energy domain-wall excitations in one-dimensional quantum spin chains. A bound state consisting of two domain walls can behave like a meson, and recently, Vovrosh et al. [PRX Quantum 3, 040309 (2022)] demonstrated that a pair of mesons could dynamically form a metastable confinement-induced bound state (consisting of four domain walls) akin to a hadronic state. However, the protocol discussed by V...
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