Search results for "EPR paradox"

showing 9 items of 9 documents

Two-qubit entanglement dynamics for two different non-Markovian environments

2009

We study the time behavior of entanglement between two noninteracting qubits each immersed in its own environment for two different non-Markovian conditions: a high-$Q$ cavity slightly off-resonant with the qubit transition frequency and a nonperfect photonic band-gap, respectively. We find that revivals and retardation of entanglement loss may occur by adjusting the cavity-qubit detuning, in the first case, while partial entanglement trapping occurs in non-ideal photonic-band gap.

03.67.Mn Entanglement measures witnesses and other characterizationCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesPhysicsQuantum Physicsbusiness.industryDynamics (mechanics)FOS: Physical sciencesMarkov process03.65.Ud Entanglement and quantum nonlocality (e.g. EPR paradox Bell's inequalities GHZ states etc.)Quantum PhysicsTrappingQuantum entanglementCondensed Matter PhysicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della Materiasymbols.namesake03.67.Mn Entanglement measures witnesses and other characterizations; 03.65.Ud Entanglement and quantum nonlocality (e.g. EPR paradox Bell's inequalities GHZ states etc.); 03.67.Lx Quantum computation architectures and implementationsQuantum mechanicsQubitsymbolsPhotonicsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)business03.67.Lx Quantum computation architectures and implementationsMathematical Physics
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Dynamics of correlations due to a phase noisy laser

2012

We analyze the dynamics of various kinds of correlations present between two initially entangled independent qubits, each one subject to a local phase noisy laser. We give explicit expressions of the relevant quantifiers of correlations for the general case of single-qubit unital evolution, which includes the case of a phase noisy laser. Although the light field is treated as classical, we find that this model can describe revivals of quantum correlations. Two different dynamical regimes of decay of correlations occur, a Markovian one (exponential decay) and a non-Markovian one (oscillatory decay with revivals) depending on the values of system parameters. In particular, in the non-Markovia…

Physics03.67.Mn Entanglement measures witnesses and other characterizationQuantum discordQuantum PhysicsPhase (waves)Markov processFOS: Physical sciencesQuantum entanglement03.65.Ud Entanglement and quantum nonlocality (e.g. EPR paradox Bell's inequalities GHZ states etc.)Condensed Matter PhysicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsSettore FIS/03 - Fisica Della Materiasymbols.namesake02.50.Ga Markov processeQubit42.50.Dv Quantum state engineering and measurementsymbolsStatistical physicsExponential decayQuantum Physics (quant-ph)QuantumMathematical PhysicsLight field03.67.Lx Quantum computation architectures and implementations03.65.Ud Entanglement and quantum nonlocality (e.g. EPR paradox Bell's inequalities GHZ states etc.); 42.50.Dv Quantum state engineering and measurements; 03.67.Mn Entanglement measures witnesses and other characterizations; 02.50.Ga Markov processes; 03.67.Lx Quantum computation architectures and implementations
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Novel type of CPT violation for correlated Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen states of neutral mesons.

2004

We discuss modifications to the concept of an "antiparticle," induced by a breakdown of the CPT symmetry at a fundamental level, realized within an extended class of quantum gravity models. The resulting loss of particle-antiparticle identity in the neutral-meson system induces a breaking of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen correlation imposed by Bose statistics. This is parametrized by a complex parameter associated with the contamination by the "wrong symmetry" state. The physical consequences are studied, and novel observables of CPT violation in phi factories are proposed.

PhysicsAntiparticleMesonCPT symmetryFísicaGeneral Physics and AstronomyObservableQuantum entanglementSymmetry (physics)symbols.namesakeTheoretical physicsQuantum mechanicssymbolsQuantum gravityHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentEPR paradoxPhysical review letters
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Time reversal violation for entangled neutral mesons

2013

A direct evidence for Time Reversal Violation (TRV) means an experiment that, considered by itself, clearly shows TRV independent of, and unconnected to, the results for CP Violation. No existing result before the recent BABAR experiment with entangled neutral B mesons had demonstrated TRV in this sense. There is a unique solution for the test of TRV with unstable particles thanks to the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) Entanglement between the two neutral mesons in B, and φ, Factories. The two quantum effects of the decays as filtering measurements of the meson states and the transfer of information of the first decay to the still living partner allow performing a genuine TRV asymmetry with t…

PhysicsHistoryParticle physicsMesonmedia_common.quotation_subjectDirect observationTime evolutionBaBar experimentQuantum entanglementAsymmetryComputer Science ApplicationsEducationsymbols.namesakesymbolsCP violationHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentB mesonEPR paradoxmedia_commonAIP Conference Proceedings
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Probing CPT in transitions with entangled neutral kaons

2015

In this paper we present a novel CPT symmetry test in the neutral kaon system based, for the first time, on the direct comparison of the probabilities of a transition and its CPT reverse. The required interchange of in ↔ out states for a given process is obtained exploiting the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen correlations of neutral kaon pairs produced at a ϕ-factory. The observable quantities have been constructed by selecting the two semileptonic decays for flavour tag, the ππ and 3π 0 decays for CP tag and the time orderings of the decay pairs. The interpretation in terms of the standard Weisskopf-Wigner approach to this system, directly connects CPT violation in these observables to the violati…

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsParticle physicsCPT symmetryHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyFOS: Physical sciencesFísicaObservableQuantum entanglementDiscrete and finite symmetries; Kaon Physics; CP violationMass matrixHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyKaon Physicssymbols.namesakeHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)CP violationsymbolsCP violationDiscrete and finite symmetriesHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentEPR paradoxSensitivity (control systems)Spurious relationshipJournal of High Energy Physics
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Higher-order Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen correlations and inseparability conditions for continuous variables

2016

We derive two types of sets of higher-order conditions for bipartite entanglement in terms of continuous variables. One corresponds to an extension of the well-known Duan inequalities from second to higher moments describing a kind of higher-order Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) correlations. Only the second type, however, expressed by powers of the mode operators leads to tight conditions with a hierarchical structure. We start with a minimization problem for the single-partite case and, using the results obtained, establish relevant inequalities for higher-order moments satisfied by all bipartite separable states. We give an explicit example of a non-Gaussian state that exhibits fourth-orde…

PhysicsPure mathematicsGaussianQuantum Physics02 engineering and technologyQuantum entanglementState (functional analysis)Squashed entanglement01 natural sciencesMultipartite entanglement010305 fluids & plasmassymbols.namesakeSeparable stateQuantum mechanics0103 physical sciences0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringBipartite graphsymbols020201 artificial intelligence & image processingEPR paradoxPhysical Review A
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Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox in single pairs of images

2015

Spatially entangled twin photons provide a test of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox in its original form of position (image plane) versus impulsion (Fourier plane). We show that recording a single pair of images in each plane is sufficient to safely demonstrate an EPR paradox. On each pair of images, we have retrieved the fluctuations by subtracting the fitted deterministic intensity shape and then have obtained an intercorrelation peak with a sufficient signal to noise ratio to safely distinguish this peak from random fluctuations. A 95% confidence interval has been determined, confirming a high degree of paradox whatever the considered single pairs. Last, we have verified that th…

PhysicsQuantum Physics[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-OPTICS]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Optics [physics.optics]PhotonPlane (geometry)FOS: Physical sciencesImage plane01 natural sciencesAtomic and Molecular Physics and Optics010305 fluids & plasmassymbols.namesakeSignal-to-noise ratioFourier transformPosition (vector)Quantum mechanics0103 physical sciencessymbolsEPR paradoxQuantum Physics (quant-ph)010306 general physicsQuantumOptics Express
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Quantum Entanglement and the Issue of Selective Influences in Psychology: An Overview

2012

Similar formalisms have been independently developed in psychology, to deal with the issue of selective influences (deciding which of several experimental manipulations selectively influences each of several, generally non-independent, response variables), and in quantum mechanics (QM), to deal with the EPR entanglement phenomena (deciding whether an EPR experiment allows for a "classical" account). The parallels between these problems are established by observing that any two noncommuting measurements in QM are mutually exclusive and can therefore be treated as analogs of different values of one and the same input. Both problems reduce to that of the existence of a jointly distributed syst…

Pure mathematics05 social sciencesQuantum entanglement01 natural sciencesRotation formalisms in three dimensions050105 experimental psychologysymbols.namesakeJoint probability distribution0103 physical sciencessymbols0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStatistical physicsEPR paradox010306 general physicsParallelsRandom variableValue (mathematics)MathematicsVariable (mathematics)
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Different operational meanings of continuous variable Gaussian entanglement criteria and Bell inequalities

2014

Entanglement, one of the most intriguing aspects of quantum mechanics, marks itself into different features of quantum states. For this reason different criteria can be used for verifying entanglement. In this paper we review some of the entanglement criteria casted for continuous variable states and link them to peculiar aspects of the original debate on the famous EPR paradox. Moreover, we give a handy expression for valuating Bell-type non-locality on Gaussian states. We also present the experimental measurement of a particular realization of the Bell operator over continuous variable entangled states produced by a sub-threshold type-II OPO.

Quantum PhysicsOperator (physics)GaussianFOS: Physical sciencesQuantum entanglementQuantum PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsExpression (mathematics)symbols.namesakeTheoretical physicsQuantum statesymbolsEPR paradoxLink (knot theory)Quantum Physics (quant-ph)InstrumentationRealization (probability)Mathematics
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