| Literature DB >> 30643140 |
Chiara Marletto1,2,3, Vlatko Vedral4,5,6,7, Salvatore Virzì8,9, Enrico Rebufello9,10, Alessio Avella9, Fabrizio Piacentini9, Marco Gramegna9, Ivo Pietro Degiovanni9, Marco Genovese11.
Abstract
Closed timelike curves are striking predictions of general relativity allowing for time-travel. They are afflicted by notorious causality issues (e.g. grandfather's paradox). Quantum models where a qubit travels back in time solve these problems, at the cost of violating quantum theory's linearity-leading e.g. to universal quantum cloning. Interestingly, linearity is violated even by open timelike curves (OTCs), where the qubit does not interact with its past copy, but is initially entangled with another qubit. Non-linear dynamics is needed to avoid violating entanglement monogamy. Here we propose an alternative approach to OTCs, allowing for monogamy violations. Specifically, we describe the qubit in the OTC via a pseudo-density operator-a unified descriptor of both temporal and spatial correlations. We also simulate the monogamy violation with polarization-entangled photons, providing a pseudo-density operator quantum tomography. Remarkably, our proposal applies to any space-time correlations violating entanglement monogamy, such as those arising in black holes.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30643140 PMCID: PMC6331626 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-08100-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Open timelike curve circuit (pictorial representation). Qubits Q1 and Q2 are initially in a singlet state. Qubit Q2 enters a chronology-violating region, emerging as qubit Q3. In the chronology-violating region, qubits Q1 and Q2 must be in a singlet state, and so are qubits Q1 and Q3. Furthermore, since Q2 and Q3 are, respectively, the past and future copy of the same qubit, they are maximally correlated. This situation violates monogamy of entanglement: this is why it cannot be described by ordinary density operators, but it can be represented by PDOs
Fig. 2Experimental setup. A CW laser at 532 nm pumps a Ti:Sapphire crystal in an optical cavity, generating a mode-locked laser at 808 nm with a 76 MHz repetition rate. The pulsed laser is frequency doubled by second harmonic generation (SHG) and then injected into a 0.5-mm-thick β-barium borate (BBO) crystal, where degenerate non-collinear type-II parametric down-conversion (PDC) occurs. By spatially selecting the photons belonging to the intersections of the two PDC cones and properly compensating the temporal walk-off between the horizontal (H) and vertical (V) polarizations by adding a 0.25-mm-thick BBO crystal in both photon paths, we generate the entangled state . Afterwards, two polarisation measurements (Q2 and Q3) can be performed in sequence on branch A and one (Q1) on branch B. Correlations among them allow demonstrating violation of monogamy relation for PDO, simulating the scenario of OTC. H: half-wave plate; Q: quarter-wave plate; PBS: polarising beam splitter; IF: interference filter
Fig. 3Pseudo-density operator tomographic reconstruction. Theoretical R123 PDO (a: since Im[R123] = 0, we only plot Re[R123]) compared with the real (b) and imaginary (c) part extracted by quantum state tomography. Below, theoretical models of the R12, R13 and R23 marginals (plots d, g and j, respectively) compared with the real (plots e, h and k) and imaginary (plots f, i and l) part of their tomographically reconstructed counterparts. Again, since in our model Im[R12] = Im[R13] = Im[R23] = 0, the corresponding theoretical plots have been omitted