Acceleration and quantum entanglement
Consider that Alice and Bob are two observers at rest separated by a long distance. Each of them has a measuring device that detects, respectively, two different quantum systems. The state of the joint system is said to be maximally entangled if, for many copies of the state, any measurement that Alice makes is completely determined by Bobs and vice versa.
What would happen to their entanglement if Alice fell into a black hole and Bob stayed safely outside? We can model this situation by considering Alice to be stationary and Rob (formerly Bob) to be uniformly accelerated with respect to Alice. We found that although the entanglement between them is reduced due to Robs acceleration, it remains nonzero as long as Robs acceleration is not infinite.
It has long been known that an accelerated observer detects a thermal bath of particles whereas an observer at rest sees only a vacuum. Known as the Unruh effect, it is this that causes the degradation in the entanglement measured by Alice and Rob. Our results are a first step in understanding how relativistic effects modify quantum information, and they imply that different observers detect different degrees of entanglement.
This has important consequences in quantum teleportation between relatively accelerated parties, since entanglement is the main resource in this task.
Ivette Fuentes-Schuller | Source: EurekAlert!
Further information: www.perimeterinstitute.ca
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