scholarly journals QCD factorization and quantum mechanics

Author(s):  
C. A. Aidala ◽  
T. C. Rogers

It is unusual to find quantum chromodynamics (QCD) factorization explained in the language of quantum information science. However, we will discuss how the issue of factorization and its breaking in high-energy QCD processes relates to phenomena like decoherence and entanglement. We will elaborate with several examples and explain them in terms familiar from basic quantum mechanics and quantum information science. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Quantum technologies in particle physics’.

2016 ◽  
Vol 14 (06) ◽  
pp. 1640030
Author(s):  
Partha Ghose

An overview is given of the nature of the quantum mechanical wave function.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Keith Baker

We demonstrate that several anomalies seen in data from high energy physics experiments have their origin in quantum entanglement, and quantum information science more generally. A few examples are provided that help clarify this proposition. Our research clearly shows that there is a thermal behavior in particle kinematics from high energy collisions at both collider and fixed target experiments that can be attributed to quantum entanglement and entanglement entropy. And in those cases where no quantum entanglement is expected, the thermal component in the kinematics is absent, in agreement with our hypothesis. We show evidence that these phenomena are interaction independent, but process dependent, using results from proton-proton scattering at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and antineutrino-nucleus scattering at Fermilab. That is, this thermal behavior due to quantum entanglement is shown to exist in both the strong and electroweak interactions. However, the process itself must include quantum entanglement in the corresponding wave functions of interacting systems in order for there to be thermalization.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Kalev ◽  
Robert L Kosut ◽  
Ivan H Deutsch

AbstractCharacterising complex quantum systems is a vital task in quantum information science. Quantum tomography, the standard tool used for this purpose, uses a well-designed measurement record to reconstruct quantum states and processes. It is, however, notoriously inefficient. Recently, the classical signal reconstruction technique known as ‘compressed sensing’ has been ported to quantum information science to overcome this challenge: accurate tomography can be achieved with substantially fewer measurement settings, thereby greatly enhancing the efficiency of quantum tomography. Here we show that compressed sensing tomography of quantum systems is essentially guaranteed by a special property of quantum mechanics itself—that the mathematical objects that describe the system in quantum mechanics are matrices with non-negative eigenvalues. This result has an impact on the way quantum tomography is understood and implemented. In particular, it implies that the information obtained about a quantum system through compressed sensing methods exhibits a new sense of ‘informational completeness.’ This has important consequences on the efficiency of the data taking for quantum tomography, and enables us to construct informationally complete measurements that are robust to noise and modelling errors. Moreover, our result shows that one can expand the numerical tool-box used in quantum tomography and employ highly efficient algorithms developed to handle large dimensional matrices on a large dimensional Hilbert space. Although we mainly present our results in the context of quantum tomography, they apply to the general case of positive semidefinite matrix recovery.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul M. Alsing ◽  
Michael L. Fanto

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cherie R. Kagan ◽  
Lee C. Bassett ◽  
Christopher B. Murray ◽  
Sarah M. Thompson

2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (46) ◽  
pp. 30805-30816 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cathal Smyth ◽  
Daniel G. Oblinsky ◽  
Gregory D. Scholes

Delocalization of a model light-harvesting complex is investigated using multipartite measures inspired by quantum information science.


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