How ‘spooky’ is quantum physics? The answer could be incalculable

In summary: The entanglement entropy seems to be a much older concept. Is there some reason why it's not useful for quantifying the entanglement in systems of a few qubits?
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  • #2
Scott Aaronson on that:
https://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/...RqH6iwR0WHFh_vFPO63H7xM9avo_o#comment-1828159

In simple terms, essentially the result is that an infinite amount of entanglement cannot be approximated by a finite amount of entanglement. So I would say that it's just one more form of the general idea that some properties of quantum systems in infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces cannot be well modeled by finite dimensional Hilbert spaces.
 
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  • #3
Demystifier said:
some properties of quantum systems in infinite dimensional Hilbert spaces cannot be well modeled by finite dimensional Hilbert spaces.
This is not really surprising. To give the simplest example:

In finite dimensions, the trace of a commutator is always zero. But the commutator of position and momentum of a harmonic oscillator (which is modeled by an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space) is a multiple of the identity, and its trace is not even defined.
 
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  • #4
Demystifier said:
an infinite amount of entanglement

Am I right in thinking, after briefly skimming Aaronson's post, that an infinite amount of entanglement requires a pair of infinite-sized quantum computers?
 
  • #5
https://www.physicsforums.com/threa...er-could-be-incalculable.983212/#post-6287422
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41...3C1Vfyn17TZshyCRrO8nX6D5Iq4CGahZ_DXgfeQ_Ii0Z8

"Wehner says, because all applications use quantum systems which are ‘finite’. In fact, it could be difficult to even conceive an experiment that could test quantum weirdness on an intrinsically ‘infinite’ system, she says.".

The classical world has no quantum weirdness (like spooky at a distance) because one needs so much isolation just to display quantum effects. But is there somehow still quantum weirdness embedded in the classical world, only hidden?

This especially pertains to the idea that non-locality being the natural form of this universe instead of being an exception. Can you give an example of how non-locality can be natural (or be hidden) in the classical world?
 
  • #6
chirhone said:
This especially pertains to the idea that non-locality being the natural form of this universe instead of being an exception. Can you give an example of how non-locality can be natural (or be hidden) in the classical world?

Maybe Relativity? Points' neighborhoods in spacetime are within the hyperbolic bounds of light rays from them, the absolute magnitudes of spacetime intervals between them non- transitive (Minkowski).

Alice and Bob - null separated
Bob and Carol - null separated
Alice and Carol - may be indefinitely far apart
 
  • #7
bahamagreen said:
Points' neighborhoods in spacetime are within the hyperbolic bounds of light rays from them

No, this is not correct. The neighborhood of an event includes points that are timelike, null, and spacelike separated from it; the light cone does not bound the neighborhood. The topology of spacetime is still ##R^4## even though the metric on it is not the one induced by that topology.
 
  • #8
PeterDonis said:
Am I right in thinking, after briefly skimming Aaronson's post, that an infinite amount of entanglement requires a pair of infinite-sized quantum computers?

Maybe one could create a quantum field configuration where there's a nonzero probability to find excitations (photons, fermions, etc.) of arbitrarily high frequency, such that there's a lot of entanglement in which modes are simultaneously excited. But the probability of finding the system having total energy greater than ##E## must approach zero when ##E\rightarrow\infty##.
 
  • #9
hilbert2 said:
Maybe one could create a quantum field configuration where there's a nonzero probability to find excitations (photons, fermions, etc.) of arbitrarily high frequency, such that there's a lot of entanglement in which modes are simultaneously excited. But the probability of finding the system having total energy greater than ##E## must approach zero when ##E\rightarrow\infty##.
It may be worthwhile to mention that even the vacuum (of free scalar field in Minkowski spacetime) contains an infinite amount of entanglement. It can be seen from computing the entanglement entropy (in a finite subregion), which turns out to be UV divergent.
 
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  • #10
Demystifier said:
It may be worthwhile to mention that even the vacuum (of free scalar field in Minkowski spacetime) contains an infinite amount of entanglement. It can be seen from computing the entanglement entropy (in a finite subregion), which turns out to be UV divergent.

I remember that sometime in early 2000s there was still a debate about how to properly quantify the degree of entanglement in quantum systems. Here's an example of a paper about that:

https://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0109081.pdf

The entanglement entropy seems to be a much older concept. Is there some reason why it's not useful for quantifying the entanglement in systems of a few qubits?
 
  • #11
hilbert2 said:
The entanglement entropy seems to be a much older concept. Is there some reason why it's not useful for quantifying the entanglement in systems of a few qubits?
The entanglement entropy involves a logarithm (of the density matrix), which is not easy to compute. But I think it's not a big problem for systems with only a few qubits.
 
  • #12
Demystifier said:
It may be worthwhile to mention that even the vacuum (of free scalar field in Minkowski spacetime) contains an infinite amount of entanglement.
Interesting! And this is because the Hilbert space is infinite? And if so, does that mean that any volume (big or small so to say) of space contains/can contain an infinite amount of entanglement?
 
  • #13
DennisN said:
Interesting! And this is because the Hilbert space is infinite?
Yes.

DennisN said:
And if so, does that mean that any volume (big or small so to say) of space contains/can contain an infinite amount of entanglement?
Yes. It stems from the continuum nature of space, i.e. from the UV divergence.

Discrete theories of space may not have this problem. A field theory on the lattice may also have an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space because the value of the field (at a given space point) may take an arbitrary value from the continuum, so it may have an infinite amount of entanglement in some state, but at least it will not have an infinite amount of entanglement in the ground state.
 
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  • #14
Demystifier said:
A field theory on the lattice may also have an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space because the value of the field (at a given space point) may take an arbitrary value from the continuum, so it may have an infinite amount of entanglement in some state, but at least it will not have an infinite amount of entanglement in the ground state.

How does one get this result?
 
  • #15
Demystifier said:
Yes.Yes. It stems from the continuum nature of space, i.e. from the UV divergence.

Discrete theories of space may not have this problem. A field theory on the lattice may also have an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space because the value of the field (at a given space point) may take an arbitrary value from the continuum, so it may have an infinite amount of entanglement in some state, but at least it will not have an infinite amount of entanglement in the ground state.

Can you give a practical example of how non-locality can exist amidst this classical world and have effects on matter?

I thought having classical world means all the quantum effects were gone from decoherence.
 
  • #16
chirhone said:
Can you give a practical example of how non-locality can exist amidst this classical world and have effects on matter?

I thought having classical world means all the quantum effects were gone from decoherence.
I'm not sure what do you mean by non-locality in this context.
 
  • #17
atyy said:
How does one get this result?
Which result exactly? I've made several claims so I'm not sure which of those needs clarification.
 
  • #18
Demystifier said:
I'm not sure what do you mean by non-locality in this context.

Entanglement everywhere even edge to edge of a galaxy is non-locality bohmian-wise (not MWI where there is no non-locality present but shuffling statistics only).

I was asking what possible effects if edge to edge of a galaxy non-locality exist. Or is there absolutely no effects in this classical world because decoherence prevails?
 
  • #19
chirhone said:
I was asking what possible effects if edge to edge of a galaxy non-locality exist. Or is there absolutely no effects in this classical world because decoherence prevails?
For practical purposes, those effects are negligible due to decoherence.
 
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  • #20
Demystifier said:
Which result exactly? I've made several claims so I'm not sure which of those needs clarification.

I didn't understand why you said that the ground state of an infinite lattice system does not have infinite entanglement.

I also didn't understand why a non-ground state of an infinite lattice system might have infinite entanglement.
 
  • #21
atyy said:
I didn't understand why you said that the ground state of an infinite lattice system does not have infinite entanglement.

I also didn't understand why a non-ground state of an infinite lattice system might have infinite entanglement.
First, I didn't say that the lattice is infinite. Second, even if it is (in the IR divergence sense), I say that the ground state entanglement entropy associated with a finite region has a finite entanglement entropy. That's because this entanglement entropy is proportional to the area of the region's boundary, which is finite. See e.g. https://arxiv.org/abs/0808.3773

Concerning non-ground states, in an infinite-dimensional Hilbert space there are always states with infinite entanglement entropy. For instance, the maximally mixed state in the Hilbert space ##{\cal H}## has von Neumann entropy
$$S={\rm log \;dim}{\cal H}$$
 
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  • #22
Demystifier said:
In simple terms, essentially the result is that an infinite amount of entanglement cannot be approximated by a finite amount of entanglement
It's a bit more than that. It says that the analogue of the Tsirelson bound is uncomputable for infinite dimensional quantum systems. Or alternatively if you could harness all of the entanglement in a region of spacetime you could solve the halting problem. Of course you can't actually harvest it.
 
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  • #23
QLogic said:
It's a bit more than that. It says that the analogue of the Tsirelson bound is uncomputable for infinite dimensional quantum systems. Or alternatively if you could harness all of the entanglement in a region of spacetime you could solve the halting problem. Of course you can't actually harvest it.
Can you suggest some source to learn more about entanglement harvesting in general?
 
  • #24
Demystifier said:
Can you suggest some source to learn more about entanglement harvesting in general?
I wish I could recommend a textbook but it's such a new field there isn't any.

The references in this paper provide a nice review of the literature, as does the paper itself:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.01764

This is a simplified worked example:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.01764

Currently the protocols yield poor harvesting, so this is an interesting engineering problem to improve on this.
 
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Related to How ‘spooky’ is quantum physics? The answer could be incalculable

1. How does quantum physics define "spooky"?

The term "spooky" in quantum physics refers to the strange and counterintuitive behavior of particles at the subatomic level. This includes concepts such as entanglement, superposition, and uncertainty, which defy our everyday understanding of the physical world.

2. Is quantum physics really as "spooky" as it is often portrayed?

The use of the word "spooky" to describe quantum physics is often used in a lighthearted or sensationalized way. While the concepts and theories of quantum physics may seem strange and mysterious, they are based on rigorous scientific research and have been repeatedly confirmed through experiments.

3. Can we fully understand or predict the behavior of quantum particles?

Due to the probabilistic nature of quantum mechanics, it is not possible to predict the exact behavior of individual particles. However, we can make accurate predictions about the statistical behavior of large groups of particles, which has been confirmed through experiments.

4. How does quantum entanglement work?

Quantum entanglement occurs when two or more particles become connected in such a way that the state of one particle is dependent on the state of the other, even when they are separated by large distances. This phenomenon has been observed and confirmed through experiments, but the mechanism behind it is still not fully understood.

5. Can quantum physics be applied to everyday life?

While the principles of quantum physics may seem abstract and removed from our everyday experiences, they have practical applications in various fields such as computing, cryptography, and medical imaging. However, the effects of quantum mechanics are typically only observed at the subatomic level and are not noticeable in our daily lives.

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