Experimental multiparticle entanglement dynamics induced by decoherence
read the original abstract
Multiparticle entanglement leads to richer correlations than two-particle entanglement and gives rise to striking contradictions with local realism, inequivalent classes of entanglement, and applications such as one-way or topological quantum computing. When exposed to decohering or dissipative environments, multiparticle entanglement yields subtle dynamical features and access to new classes of states and applications. Here, using a string of trapped ions, we experimentally characterize the dynamics of entanglement of a multiparticle state under the influence of decoherence. By embedding an entangled state of four qubits in a decohering environment (via spontaneous decay), we observe a rich dynamics crossing distinctive domains: Bell-inequality violation, entanglement superactivation, bound entanglement, and full separability. We also develop new theoretical tools for characterizing entanglement in quantum states. Our techniques to control the environment can be used to enable novel quantum-computation, state-engineering, and simulation paradigms based on dissipation and decoherence.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Triangle Criterion: a mixed-state magic criterion with applications in distillation and detection
The Triangle Criterion detects mixed-state magic, proves multi-qubit distillation is strictly stronger than single-qubit schemes, and identifies a purity bound plus undetectable unfaithful magic states.
-
Experimental verification of multi-copy activation of genuine multipartite entanglement
Experimental demonstration that two copies of a biseparable three-qubit state exhibit genuine multipartite entanglement when combined on a trapped-ion device.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.