| Literature DB >> 33286002 |
Chiara Marletto1,2,3, Vlatko Vedral1,2,3, Salvatore Virzì4,5, Enrico Rebufello5,6, Alessio Avella5, Fabrizio Piacentini5, Marco Gramegna5, Ivo Pietro Degiovanni5, Marco Genovese5,7.
Abstract
Pseudo-density matrices are a generalisation of quantum states and do not obey monogamy of quantum correlations. Could this be the solution to the paradox of information loss during the evaporation of a black hole? In this paper we discuss this possibility, providing a theoretical proposal to extend quantum theory with these pseudo-states to describe the statistics arising in black-hole evaporation. We also provide an experimental demonstration of this theoretical proposal, using a simulation in optical regime, that tomographically reproduces the correlations of the pseudo-density matrix describing this physical phenomenon.Entities:
Keywords: black hole information loss; entanglement monogamy; pseudo-density matrix
Year: 2020 PMID: 33286002 PMCID: PMC7516659 DOI: 10.3390/e22020228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Entropy (Basel) ISSN: 1099-4300 Impact factor: 2.524
Figure 1Experimental setup. A maximally entangled singlet state is generated by pumping a type-II (BBO) crystal. Two polarization measurements, M1 and M2 (at times and , respectively) are performed in sequence on photon A, while a single measurement (M3) is carried on photon B. Correlations among them certify entanglement monogamy violation for the whole pseudo-density operator (PDO) in Equation (2), describing the scenario of the spatio-temporal multi-partite entanglement (outside and inside the black hole) considered.
Figure 2Tomographic reconstruction of the real (panel a) and imaginary (panel b) part of the reduced pseudo-density operator , describing the temporal correlations between qubits 1 and 2, compared with the corresponding theoretical expectations (panels c and d, respectively).
Figure 3Tomographic reconstruction of the real (panel a) and imaginary (panel b) part of the reduced pseudo-density operator , related to the spatially maximally entangled state within the black hole, compared with the corresponding theoretically-expected counterparts (panels c and d, respectively).