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arxiv: 1504.01187 · v1 · pith:PK6KB646new · submitted 2015-04-06 · 🪐 quant-ph

Distinguishing Quantum and Classical Many-Body Systems

classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords quantummany-bodysystemdistantinequalityprotocolsystemsclassical
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Controllable systems relying on quantum behavior to simulate distinctly quantum models so far rely on increasingly challenging classical computing to verify their results. We develop a general protocol for confirming that an arbitrary many-body system, such as a quantum simulator, can entangle distant objects. The protocol verifies that distant qubits interacting separately with the system can become mutually entangled, and therefore serves as a local test that excitations of the system can create non-local quantum correlations. We derive an inequality analogous to Bell's inequality which can only be violated through entanglement between distant sites of the many-body system. Although our protocol is applicable to general many-body systems, it requires finding system-dependent local operations to violate the inequality. A specific example in quantum magnetism is presented.

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