Entanglement Between Noncomplementary Parts of Many-Body Systems

Entanglement Between Noncomplementary Parts of Many-Body Systems

  • Hannu Christian Wichterich
Publisher:Springer Science & Business MediaISBN 13: 9783642193422ISBN 10: 3642193420

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Entanglement Between Noncomplementary Parts of Many-Body Systems is written by Hannu Christian Wichterich and published by Springer Science & Business Media. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 3642193420 (ISBN 10) and 9783642193422 (ISBN 13).

This thesis investigates the structure and behaviour of entanglement, the purely quantum mechanical part of correlations, in many-body systems, employing both numerical and analytical techniques at the interface of condensed matter theory and quantum information theory. Entanglement can be seen as a precious resource which, for example, enables the noiseless and instant transmission of quantum information, provided the communicating parties share a sufficient "amount" of it. Furthermore, measures of entanglement of a quantum mechanical state are perceived as useful probes of collective properties of many-body systems. For instance, certain measures are capable of detecting and classifying ground-state phases and, particularly, transition (or critical) points separating such phases. Chapters 2 and 3 focus on entanglement in many-body systems and its use as a potential resource for communication protocols. They address the questions of how a substantial amount of entanglement can be established between distant subsystems, and how efficiently this entanglement could be "harvested" by way of measurements. The subsequent chapters 4 and 5 are devoted to universality of entanglement between large collections of particles undergoing a quantum phase transition, where, despite the enormous complexity of these systems, collective properties including entanglement no longer depend crucially on the microscopic details.