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Quantum Entanglement
Quantum entanglement
Quantum entanglement is a
quantum mechanical phenomenon in which the
quantum states of two or more objects have to be described with reference to
each other, even though the individual objects may be
spatially separated.
This leads to
correlations between observable physical properties of the systems that are
stronger than any classical correlations. As a result, measurements performed on
one system may be interpreted as "influencing" other systems entangled with it.
However, no
information can be transmitted through entanglement.
Entanglement is one of the properties of quantum mechanics
which caused
Einstein and others to dislike the theory. In
1935, Einstein,
Podolsky, and Rosen formulated the EPR
paradox, demonstrating that entanglement makes quantum mechanics a non-local
theory. Einstein famously derided entanglement as "spooky action at a distance."
On the other hand, quantum mechanics was highly successful in
producing correct experimental predictions, and the phenomenon of "spooky
action" could in fact be observed. Some suggested the existence of unknown
microscopic parameters, known as "hidden variables", that were deterministic and
obeyed the locality principle, but gave rise to quantum mechanical behavior in
the bulk. However, in
1964
Bell showed that the effects of quantum entanglement could be experimentally
distinguished from the effects of a broad class of local hidden-variable
theories. Subsequent experiments verified the quantum mechanical predictions,
and entanglement has now become accepted as a bona fide physical
phenomenon. The "Bell inequalities" are described in greater detail in the
article
EPR paradox.
Entanglement obeys the letter if not the spirit of
relativity.
Although two entangled systems can interact across large spatial separations, no
useful information can be transmitted in this way, so
causality
cannot be violated through entanglement. This occurs for two subtle reasons: (i)
quantum mechanical measurements yield
probabilistic results, and (ii) the
no cloning theorem forbids the statistical inspection of entangled quantum
states.
Although no information can be transmitted through
entanglement alone, it is possible to transmit information using a set of
entangled states used in conjunction with a classical information
channel. This process is known as
quantum teleportation. Despite its name, quantum teleportation can not be
used to transmit information faster than light, because a classical information
channel is involved.
Though an area of active research, some of the essential
properties of entanglement are now understood, and it is the basis for emerging
technologies such as
quantum computing and
quantum cryptography. In the following article, we will briefly survey the
mathematical formulation of entanglement.
The following discussion builds on the theoretical framework
developed in the articles
bra-ket notation and
mathematical formulation of quantum mechanics.
Consider two systems A and B, with respective Hilbert spaces
HA and HB. The Hilbert space of the
composite system is HA × HB. If the
first system is in state |ψ〉A and the second in state |φ〉B,
the state of the composite system is
-
.
This is called a pure state.
Pick observables (and corresponding
Hermitian
operators) ΩA acting on HA, and ΩB
acting on HB. According to the
spectral theorem, we can find a
basis {|i〉A} for HA composed of eigenvectors
of ΩA, and a basis {|j〉B} for HB
composed of eigenvectors of ΩB. We can then write the above pure
state as
-
,
for some choice of complex coefficients ai
and bj. This is not the most general state of HA×HB,
which has the form
-
.
If such a state cannot be factored into the form of a
separable state, it is known as an entangled state.
For example, given two basis vectors {|0〉A, |1〉A}
of HA and two basis vectors {|0〉B, |1〉B}
of HB, the following is an entangled state:
-
.
If the composite system is in this state, neither system A
nor system B have a definite state. Instead, their states are superposed with
one another. In this sense, the systems are "entangled".
Now suppose Alice is an observer for system A, and Bob is an
observer for system B. If Alice performs the measurement ΩA, there
are two possible outcomes, occurring with equal probability:
-
Alice measures 0, and the state of the system collapses to
|0〉A |1〉B
-
Alice measures 1, and the state of the system collapses to
|1〉A|0〉B.
If the former occurs, any subsequent measurement of ΩB
performed by Bob always returns 1. If the latter occurs, Bob's measurement
always returns 0. Thus, system B has been altered by Alice performing her
measurement on system A., even if the systems A and B are spatially separated.
This is the foundation of the EPR paradox.
The outcome of Alice's measurement is random. Alice cannot
decide which state to collapse the composite system into, and therefore cannot
transmit information to Bob by acting on her system. (There is a possible
loophole: if Bob could make multiple duplicate copies of the state he receives,
he could obtain information by collecting statistics. This loophole is closed by
the
no cloning theorem, which forbids the creation of duplicate states.)
Causality is thus preserved, as we claimed above.
Quantifying entanglement is an important step towards better
understanding the phenomenon. The method of
density matrices provides us with a formal measure of entanglement. Let the
state of the composite system be |Ψ〉. The
projection operator for this state is denoted
-
.
We define the density matrix of system A, a
linear operator in the Hilbert space of system A, as the
trace of ρT
over the basis of system B:
-
.
For example, the density matrix of A for the entangled state
discussed above is
-
and the density matrix of A for the pure state discussed
above is
-
.
This is simply the projection operator of |ψ〉A.
Note that the density matrix of the composite system, ρT, also takes
this form. This is unsurprising, since we assumed that the state of the
composite system is pure.
Given a general density matrix ρ, we can calculate the
quantity
-
where k is
Boltzmann's constant, and the trace is taken over the space H in
which ρ acts. It turns out that S is precisely the
entropy of
the system corresponding to H.
The entropy of any pure state is zero, which is unsurprising
since there is no uncertainty about the state of the system. The entropy of any
of the two subsystems of the entangled state discussed above is kln 2
(which can be shown to be the maximum entropy for a one-level system). If the
overall system is pure, the entropy of its subsystems can be used to measure its
degree of entanglement with the other subsystems.
It can also be shown that
unitary operators acting on a state (such as the time evolution operator
obtained from the
Schrödinger equation) leave the entropy unchanged. This associates the
reversibility of a process with its resulting entropy change, which is a deep
result linking quantum mechanics to
information theory and
thermodynamics.
The language of density matrices is also used to describe
quantum
ensembles, or a collection of identical quantum systems.
Consider a "black-box" apparatus that spits
electrons
towards an observer. The electrons' Hilbert spaces are
identical. The apparatus might produce electrons that are all in the same
state; in this case, the electrons received by the observer are then called a
pure ensemble.
However, the apparatus could produce electrons in different
states. For example, it could produce two populations of electrons: one with
state |z+〉 (spins
aligned in the positive z direction), and the other with state
|y-〉 (spins aligned in the negative y
direction.) Generally, there can be any number of populations, each
corresponding to a different state. This is a mixed ensemble.
We can describe an ensemble as a collection of populations
with weights wi and corresponding states |αi〉. The density
matrix of the ensemble is defined as
-
.
All the above results for density matrices and the quantum
entropy remain valid with this definition. Motivated by this, as well as the
many-worlds interpretation, many physicists now believe that all
mixed ensembles can be explained as entangled quantum states.
The vacuum in
quantum field theory, is hugely entangled, so entanglement isn't just about
particles. See also
Reeh-Schlieder theorem.
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