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arxiv: 2605.30419 · v1 · pith:RKHDAWBAnew · submitted 2026-05-28 · ✦ hep-ph · hep-ex· hep-th· quant-ph

New quantum information perspectives in the axion--photon and neutrino systems

Pith reviewed 2026-06-29 06:16 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ✦ hep-ph hep-exhep-thquant-ph
keywords axion-photon mixingbipartite entanglementconcurrencenegativityquantum speed limitsneutrino oscillationsquantum discordentanglement entropy
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The pith

Axion-photon mixing in the two-level sector generates bipartite mode entanglement with maxima at resonance.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper applies quantum information concepts to axion-photon oscillations. In the two-level single-excitation sector the mixing dynamics produce entanglement between the axion and photon modes. Entanglement entropy, concurrence, negativity, mutual information, discord and entanglement capacity all reach extremal values at resonant or strong mixing. Quantum speed limits are examined for both axion-photon and neutrino systems, with the two bounds coinciding only at resonance or maximal mixing. An additional entanglement speed limit is derived that saturates temporarily before weakening.

Core claim

In the two-level single-excitation sector of the axion-photon system, the coupled dynamics naturally generate bipartite axion-photon mode entanglement. The analysis details how entanglement entropy, concurrence, negativity, quantum mutual information, discord and capacity of entanglement attain their extremal values, with maximal entanglement tied to resonant or strong-mixing conversion and distinct thresholds separating the regimes. Parallel results hold for neutrino oscillations. Orthogonalisation occurs only at resonance or maximal mixing, where the Mandelstam-Tamm and Margolus-Levitin bounds coincide; away from resonance the Margolus-Levitin bound saturates at maximal conversion while th

What carries the argument

the two-level single-excitation sector of the axion-photon mixing dynamics that induces bipartite mode entanglement

If this is right

  • Maximal axion-photon entanglement occurs precisely at resonant or strong-mixing conversion.
  • The Mandelstam-Tamm and Margolus-Levitin bounds coincide only at resonance or at maximal neutrino mixing.
  • Away from resonance the Margolus-Levitin bound saturates at the point of maximal conversion.
  • The Mandelstam-Tamm bound stays weaker than the Margolus-Levitin bound outside those special points.
  • The entanglement quantum speed limit for axion-photon conversion saturates temporarily before becoming weak in either detuning- or mixing-dominated regimes.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Entanglement measures could function as additional observables in axion haloscope or helioscope searches.
  • The identified thresholds might guide parameter choices in quantum-enhanced axion detection proposals.
  • Analogous quantum-information analysis could be applied to other two-state oscillation systems such as neutral-meson mixing.
  • The separation into detuning- and mixing-dominated regimes suggests distinct experimental regimes for testing speed-limit saturation.

Load-bearing premise

The system remains confined to the two-level single-excitation sector where the entanglement and speed-limit calculations apply.

What would settle it

An experiment that measures axion-photon conversion at resonance and finds that concurrence or negativity fails to reach its predicted maximum would falsify the claimed connection between maximal entanglement and resonance.

read the original abstract

In this work, we broach a quantum information-theoretic treatment of axion--photon mixing. Motivated by an emerging class of quantum-enhanced axion searches, we analyse the two-level single-excitation sector of axion--photon oscillations, demonstrating how the coupled dynamics naturally generate bipartite axion--photon mode entanglement. We study in detail the ensuing aspects of entanglement entropy, concurrence, negativity, quantum mutual information and discord, and capacity of entanglement, and the corresponding neutrino analogues wherever novel and previously unaddressed. In particular, we highlight the characteristic features that connect maximal axion--photon entanglement to resonant or strong-mixing conversion, and the distinct thresholds for the extremal values attained by the quantum information measures. We study aspects of the Mandelstam--Tamm and Margolus--Levitin quantum speed limits for both the axion--photon and neutrino systems. While orthogonalisation occurs only at axion--photon resonance, or at maximal neutrino mixing, where the two bounds coincide, away from these limits, the Margolus--Levitin bound is saturated at maximal conversion, while the Mandelstam--Tamm bound is generally weaker. We also study an entanglement quantum speed limit for axion--photon conversion, that separates into detuning-dominated and magnetic-mixing-dominated regimes, and find that it is saturated for a period and then the bound becomes weak. The results in this work identify the quantum resources and limiting timescales intrinsic to axion--photon conversion, and connect axion phenomenology, neutrino oscillations and quantum information theory.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript applies standard two-level quantum mechanics to the single-excitation sector of the axion-photon mixing Hamiltonian (and its neutrino analogue), deriving bipartite entanglement measures (concurrence, negativity, mutual information, discord, entanglement capacity) and quantum speed limits (Mandelstam-Tamm, Margolus-Levitin, and an entanglement QSL) directly from the time-evolution operator. It reports that maximal entanglement occurs at resonance or strong mixing, that the two QSL bounds coincide only at resonance/maximal mixing, that the Margolus-Levitin bound saturates at maximal conversion away from resonance, and that the entanglement QSL separates into detuning- versus mixing-dominated regimes.

Significance. If the derivations hold, the work supplies a consistent quantum-information framing of axion-photon conversion and neutrino oscillations inside the stated sector, identifying concrete thresholds (resonance for maximal entanglement, regime-dependent saturation of the QSLs) that are falsifiable within that model. The explicit restriction to the single-excitation sector and the absence of circularity in the reported measures are strengths; the results could inform quantum-resource considerations in future axion searches, though direct experimental mapping remains outside the manuscript's scope.

major comments (1)
  1. [Hamiltonian and sector definition (early sections)] The two-level single-excitation restriction is load-bearing for every quantitative claim (entanglement measures, QSL saturation thresholds). The manuscript states the restriction but does not supply an error estimate or validity criterion for typical axion haloscope parameters (e.g., photon occupation number or magnetic-field strength); without this, the regime of applicability cannot be assessed from the text alone.
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation for the mixing angle, detuning, and magnetic coupling should be unified across the axion-photon and neutrino sections to avoid reader confusion.
  2. A short paragraph comparing the obtained concurrence and negativity values to the well-known two-level oscillation probability would make the connection to standard phenomenology more immediate.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading, positive assessment, and constructive comment. We address the major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Hamiltonian and sector definition (early sections)] The two-level single-excitation restriction is load-bearing for every quantitative claim (entanglement measures, QSL saturation thresholds). The manuscript states the restriction but does not supply an error estimate or validity criterion for typical axion haloscope parameters (e.g., photon occupation number or magnetic-field strength); without this, the regime of applicability cannot be assessed from the text alone.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit validity criterion or error estimate for the single-excitation sector would strengthen the manuscript. In the revised version we will insert a short paragraph (likely in Section II) that supplies a quantitative estimate of the approximation's accuracy for representative haloscope parameters, including typical photon occupation numbers and magnetic-field strengths, together with the resulting error bound on the reported entanglement and QSL quantities. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained

full rationale

The paper restricts analysis to the two-level single-excitation sector and derives all entanglement measures (concurrence, negativity, mutual information, discord, capacity of entanglement) and quantum speed limits (Mandelstam-Tamm, Margolus-Levitin, entanglement QSL) directly from the time-evolution operator of the axion-photon and neutrino Hamiltonians. Maximal entanglement at resonance, distinct saturation thresholds, and regime separations follow from explicit computation on the resulting two-dimensional dynamics. No parameters are fitted to data and then called predictions; no load-bearing steps invoke self-citations that reduce to unverified inputs; the sector restriction is stated upfront and all results are obtained within it without external renormalization or ansatz smuggling. The central claims are independent computations on the mixing Hamiltonian.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claims rest on the standard two-level mixing Hamiltonian for axions and neutrinos plus the single-excitation restriction; no new free parameters or invented entities are introduced beyond those already standard in the axion and neutrino literature.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption The axion-photon system is accurately described by a two-level single-excitation sector Hamiltonian.
    Explicitly stated as the sector analyzed in the abstract.
  • standard math Standard quantum mechanics and the definitions of entanglement measures and quantum speed limits apply directly to the mixing dynamics.
    Implicit throughout the use of concurrence, negativity, Mandelstam-Tamm, Margolus-Levitin, and entanglement QSL.

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Reference graph

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