Creation of two-particle entanglement in open macroscopic quantum systems (Q447494): Difference between revisions

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Property / author: Marco Merkli / rank
 
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Property / author: Vladimir I. Tsifrinovich / rank
 
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Summary: We consider an open quantum system of \(N\) not directly interacting spins (qubits) in contact with both local and collective thermal environments. The qubit-environment interactions are energy conserving. We trace out the variables of the thermal environments and \(N - 2\) qubits to obtain the time-dependent reduced density matrix for two arbitrary qubits. We numerically simulate the reduced dynamics and the creation of entanglement (concurrence) as a function of the parameters of the thermal environments and the number of qubits, \(N\). Our results demonstrate that the two-qubit entanglement generally decreases as \(N\) increases. We show analytically that, in the limit \(N \rightarrow \infty\), no entanglement can be created. This indicates that collective thermal environments cannot create two-qubit entanglement when many qubits are located within a region of the size of the environment coherence length. We discuss possible relevance of our consideration to recent quantum information devices and biosystems.
Property / review text: Summary: We consider an open quantum system of \(N\) not directly interacting spins (qubits) in contact with both local and collective thermal environments. The qubit-environment interactions are energy conserving. We trace out the variables of the thermal environments and \(N - 2\) qubits to obtain the time-dependent reduced density matrix for two arbitrary qubits. We numerically simulate the reduced dynamics and the creation of entanglement (concurrence) as a function of the parameters of the thermal environments and the number of qubits, \(N\). Our results demonstrate that the two-qubit entanglement generally decreases as \(N\) increases. We show analytically that, in the limit \(N \rightarrow \infty\), no entanglement can be created. This indicates that collective thermal environments cannot create two-qubit entanglement when many qubits are located within a region of the size of the environment coherence length. We discuss possible relevance of our consideration to recent quantum information devices and biosystems. / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81P40 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 81S22 / rank
 
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 82D30 / rank
 
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Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6076587 / rank
 
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Revision as of 09:25, 30 June 2023

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Creation of two-particle entanglement in open macroscopic quantum systems
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    Creation of two-particle entanglement in open macroscopic quantum systems (English)
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    4 September 2012
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    Summary: We consider an open quantum system of \(N\) not directly interacting spins (qubits) in contact with both local and collective thermal environments. The qubit-environment interactions are energy conserving. We trace out the variables of the thermal environments and \(N - 2\) qubits to obtain the time-dependent reduced density matrix for two arbitrary qubits. We numerically simulate the reduced dynamics and the creation of entanglement (concurrence) as a function of the parameters of the thermal environments and the number of qubits, \(N\). Our results demonstrate that the two-qubit entanglement generally decreases as \(N\) increases. We show analytically that, in the limit \(N \rightarrow \infty\), no entanglement can be created. This indicates that collective thermal environments cannot create two-qubit entanglement when many qubits are located within a region of the size of the environment coherence length. We discuss possible relevance of our consideration to recent quantum information devices and biosystems.
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