Recognition: unknown
Separability Criterion for Density Matrices
read the original abstract
A quantum system consisting of two subsystems is separable if its density matrix can be written as $\rho=\sum_A w_A\,\rho_A'\otimes\rho_A''$, where $\rho_A'$ and $\rho_A''$ are density matrices for the two subsytems. In this Letter, it is shown that a necessary condition for separability is that a matrix, obtained by partial transposition of $\rho$, has only non-negative eigenvalues. This criterion is stronger than Bell's inequality.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 7 Pith papers
-
Minimal noise in non-quantized gravity
Non-quantized gravity models that preserve Galilean invariance and reproduce Newtonian interaction on average require a minimal noise injection to remain non-entangling.
-
Witnessing entanglement between photon and matter due to graviton exchange
A PPT witness criterion is proposed to detect graviton-mediated entanglement between photons and matter qubits, attaining a maximal negativity of -0.052 for non-maximally entangled states when the photon coherent-stat...
-
Separability from Multipartite Measures
Third-order negativity is a necessary and sufficient criterion for full separability of tripartite pure states and extends to mixed states and qudits.
-
Spin Correlation and Quantum Entanglement of Fermion Pairs in Transversely Polarized $e^-e^+$ Collisions
Transverse polarization in e+e- collisions generates maximally entangled fermion pairs in QED processes and boosts entanglement in electroweak and Bhabha scattering.
-
Separability from Multipartite Measures
Third-order negativity provides a necessary and sufficient criterion for full separability of tripartite pure states, with generalizations to mixed states, qudits, and an application to conformal field theory.
-
Quantum entanglement in electron-nucleus collisions: Role of the linearly polarized gluon distribution
The linearly polarized gluon distribution enhances entanglement of heavy quark pairs in electron-nucleus collisions when total and relative transverse momenta are orthogonal.
-
Understanding Bell locality tests at colliders
Under mild assumptions, local hidden variable theories become testable at colliders and can be disproved via Bell-like inequalities for muon and tau pairs.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.