| Literature DB >> 29379056 |
Tomasz Wasak1, Augusto Smerzi2, Jan Chwedeńczuk3.
Abstract
Entanglement between two separate systems is a necessary resource to violate a Bell inequality in a test of local realism. We demonstrate that to overcome the Bell bound, this correlation must be accompanied by the entanglement between the constituent particles. This happens whenever a super-selection rule prohibits coherences between states with different total number of particles and thus imposes a constraint on feasible local operations in each sub-system. We show that the necessary entanglement between the particles might solely result from their indistinguishability. We also give an example of both mode and particle-entangled pure state, which does not violate any Bell inequality. Our result reveals a fundamental relation between the non-locality and the particle entanglement.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29379056 PMCID: PMC5788934 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20034-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Two particles are coherently split and sent into distant parties A and B. If the particles are distinguishable, the system will not violate any Bell inequality in presence of SSR, because the state shared by A and B is effectively particle-separable. If the particles are identical, entanglement due to (anti-) symmetrization is sufficient to violate a Bell ineqality.