Entanglement Experiments: Sources & Detection

  • Thread starter Thread starter yuiop
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Entanglement
yuiop
Messages
3,962
Reaction score
20
In another thread https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3143182&postcount=34 it is stated that:
Experiments show that particles can be entangled that have never interacted. QM predicts this, but your ideas wouldn't. Also, particles can become entangled after they are detected. Hardly the kind of thing that would happen if there was a common event responsible for entanglement.

So far all entanglement experiments I have read about, have a single common source, usually a pump laser passed through a BBO crystal. Can anyone provide references for actual experiments that demonstrate entanglement of particles that have never interacted or demonstrates that particles that were not entangled before detection, become entangled after detection?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Last edited:
And of course there is the entanglement of identical particles, which usually doesn't do much but can change the energy of a multi-electron atom (there's the "exchange energy" when the requirement that the exchange of fermions should change the sign of the wavefunction, from whence also comes the Pauli exclusion principle). So for example, when a new electron that just got created, say in a pair creation episode, arrives in a white dwarf, it immediately encounters degeneracy pressure because of its entanglement with all the other electrons already there. Of course, the above language is fundamentally incorrect because it pretends we can say which is the electron that is the new arrival, which in fact we cannot-- it gets lost in a sea of indistinguishable electrons, which is one of the most prevalent forms of entanglement. I would say it requires no "interaction" for it to be present, it is an expression of the fact that at some level, the creation of any new electron makes reference to whatever information is contained in the entire electron distribution everywhere in the universe, in the sense that no individual electron is allowed to carry its "own information" independently of all those others, since they are all indistinguishable.
 
ThomasT said:
These papers were referenced in DrC's Entangled "Frankenstein" Photons paper:

T. Jennewein, G. Weihs, J. Pan, A. Zeilinger, Experimental Nonlocality Proof of Quantum
Teleportation and Entanglement Swapping (2002).
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/quant-ph/pdf/0201/0201134v1.pdf

R. Kaltenbaek, R. Prevedel, M. Aspelmeyer, A. Zeilinger, High-fidelity entanglement
swapping with fully independent sources (2008).
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0809/0809.3991v3.pdf



regard the first paper it seem that the secuence of the events has no influence on the results, can't change it, the causality it lost.

"Thus depending on Alice’s later measurement, Bob’s earlier results either indicate that photons 0 and 3 were entangled or photons 0 and 1 and photons 2 and 3.
This means that the physical interpretation of his results depends on Alice’s later decision."
 
Insights auto threads is broken atm, so I'm manually creating these for new Insight articles. Towards the end of the first lecture for the Qiskit Global Summer School 2025, Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, Olivia Lanes (Global Lead, Content and Education IBM) stated... Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/quantum-entanglement-is-a-kinematic-fact-not-a-dynamical-effect/ by @RUTA
If we release an electron around a positively charged sphere, the initial state of electron is a linear combination of Hydrogen-like states. According to quantum mechanics, evolution of time would not change this initial state because the potential is time independent. However, classically we expect the electron to collide with the sphere. So, it seems that the quantum and classics predict different behaviours!
According to recent podcast between Jacob Barandes and Sean Carroll, Barandes claims that putting a sensitive qubit near one of the slits of a double slit interference experiment is sufficient to break the interference pattern. Here are his words from the official transcript: Is that true? Caveats I see: The qubit is a quantum object, so if the particle was in a superposition of up and down, the qubit can be in a superposition too. Measuring the qubit in an orthogonal direction might...
Back
Top