Is Polarisation Entanglement Possible in Photon Detection?

In summary, the conversation discusses the polarisation state of a photon before detection and whether it is reasonable to assume that it is in a superposition of all possible states. It is clarified that the polarization state can be a single pure state or a mixture of multiple pure states, and in order to determine the polarization, multiple measurements need to be taken. It is also noted that if the photon is entangled with another photon, it is in a pure state but the individual photons are in a mixture of states. There is a discussion about the difference between superposition and mixture in relation to opposite states, and it is ultimately concluded that for entangled photons, neither photon is in a pure state.
  • #1
Dadface
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If we don't know the polarisation state of a photon before detection is it reasonable to assume that it's in a superposition of all possible states? Thank you if anyone can clarify.
 
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  • #2
The polarization of the state can be a single pure state, which may be a superposition of polarizations, or a mixture of multiple pure states (e.g. partially polarized light)

In order to figure out the polarization state of the photon, one needs to measure many identical such photons in all three polarization bases (horizontal/vertical diagonal/antidiagonal, and left/right circular). With these measurements, one can reconstruct a strong estimate of the polarization state. This process is called quantum state tomography.
 
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  • #3
Dadface said:
If we don't know the polarisation state of a photon before detection is it reasonable to assume that it's in a superposition of all possible states? Thank you if anyone can clarify.

Definitely not. If you have the situation in which you don't know what the photon's polarization is, then you don't use superpositions, you use mixed states, which are represented by density matrices, not pure states.

The distinction is the difference between column matrices and square matrices. If you use [itex]\left( \begin{array}\\ 1 \\ 0\end{array} \right)[/itex] to represent a horizontally polarized photon, and [itex]\left( \begin{array}\\ 0 \\ 1\end{array} \right)[/itex] to represent a vertically polarized photon, then a superposition of horizontal and vertical photons would be represented by the general column matrix: [itex]\left( \begin{array}\\ \alpha \\ \beta \end{array} \right)[/itex] where [itex]|\alpha|^2 + |\beta|^2 = 1[/itex]. An observable would be represented in this simple model by a 2x2 matrix [itex]O[/itex]. If the photon is in the state [itex]U[/itex] (a column matrix), then the expected value of a measurement of [itex]O[/itex] would be given by: [itex]\langle O \rangle = U^\dagger O U[/itex].

In contrast, a mixed state consisting of a probability [itex]p_1[/itex] of being horizontally polarized and [itex]p_2[/itex] of being vertically polarized would be represented by the 2x2 matrix: [itex]\left( \begin{array}\\ p_1 & 0 \\ 0 & p_2 \end{array} \right)[/itex]. If the photon is in the mixed state [itex]D[/itex] (a 2x2 matrix), then the expectation value for a measurement of [itex]O[/itex] would be: [itex]tr(D O)[/itex], where [itex]D O[/itex] means matrix multiplication, and [itex]tr[/itex] means the trace operator (add up the diagonal values of the resulting 2x2 matrix).
 
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  • #4
Thank you both. I'm not sure if I expressed my question clearly enough but I was referring to entangled photons as in the title of the thread. In the case of two photon polarisation entanglement is it correct to say that before measurement each photon can be considered as being in two polarisation states at once? Thank you.
 
  • #5
Dadface said:
Thank you both. I'm not sure if I expressed my question clearly enough but I was referring to entangled photons as in the title of the thread. In the case of two photon polarisation entanglement is it correct to say that before measurement each photon can be considered as being in two polarisation states at once? Thank you.

If you have a pair of photons, then there are three different "systems" that we could look at:
  1. System 1: The first photon.
  2. System 2: The second photon.
  3. System 3: The composite system consisting of two photons.
Each of these three systems can either be described as a pure state, or as a mixture. If the photons are entangled, then System 3 is in a pure state, but Systems 1 and 2 are mixtures.

That's an odd fact about quantum mechanics that has no analog in classical physics.
 
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  • #6
Dadface said:
If we don't know the polarisation state of a photon before detection is it reasonable to assume that it's in a superposition of all possible states? Thank you if anyone can clarify.

If a photon is polarization entangled, it's polarization is unknown and it's in a superposition of states.
 
  • #7
DrChinese said:
If a photon is polarization entangled, it's polarization is unknown and it's in a superposition of states.

Don't you mean "mixture", not "superposition"?
 
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  • #8
Yes, it should be mixture. As I've shown somewhere earlier in this or a recent other thread ;-)), with the usual entangled state
$$|\psi \rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} (|HV \rangle-|VH \rangle),$$
each of the single photons is in the maximum-entropy state, i.e., it's unpolorized
$$\hat{\rho}=\frac{1}{2} \hat{1}=\frac{1}{2} (|H \rangle \langle H|+|V \rangle \langle V|).$$
 
  • #9
stevendaryl said:
Don't you mean "mixture", not "superposition"?

I say superposition is a better description because there is no specific well-defined polarization, not just that it is unknown. But I think vanhees71 has made the point that the entangled state is something of its own animal. He usually has a better knack of labeling these things than I do.
 
  • #10
Thanks to all. That's got me looking up the difference between superposition of states and mixture of states as they relate to opposite states. Is it true to say that if a photon is in superposition it will be in opposite states simultaneously whereas if its a mixture it moves between opposite states but at any particular time is in one state only.
 
  • #11
DrChinese said:
I say superposition is a better description because there is no specific well-defined polarization, not just that it is unknown. But I think vanhees71 has made the point that the entangled state is something of its own animal. He usually has a better knack of labeling these things than I do.

But it's sort of contradicting what others have been saying, that the two-photon state is a superposition, but that there is no one-photon (pure) state. A superposition is a pure state (just a different pure state from any of the basis states), and for entangled photons, neither photon is in a pure state.
 
  • #12
stevendaryl said:
But it's sort of contradicting what others have been saying, that the two-photon state is a superposition, but that there is no one-photon (pure) state. A superposition is a pure state (just a different pure state from any of the basis states), and for entangled photons, neither photon is in a pure state.

Not disputing your or vanhees71 specifically, as I think both of you follow the terminology better than I. I don't understand how the entangled two-photon system is a superposition, but it doesn't make sense to refer to the components as being in a superposition too. There really aren't any components in the first place, it's just a useful way to refer to them.

Wiki describes a Bell state (what vanhees71 mentions in his post) as an "equal superposition" (under "Qubit"). Of course that is really referring to the system.
 
  • #13
I suppose it depends on what people mean by superposition. If by this it is meant that we have a sum of vectors (pure states) then, clearly, the sum is also a vector (pure state). If this is what is meant by 'superposition' then it's absolutely incorrect to say one of the photons in a 2-photon entangled state is in a superposition state.

This follows from the definition of entanglement. By definition an entangled pure state of 2 objects A and B is one that cannot be written as a product of a pure state of A and a pure state of B.

So trying to say that we have an entangled state in which either of the entangled component parts is in a pure state is just a complete non-starter and makes no sense whatsoever.
 
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  • #14
Simon Phoenix said:
This follows from the definition of entanglement. By definition an entangled pure state of 2 objects A and B is one that cannot be written as a product of a pure state of A and a pure state of B.

I already saw you guys have discussed this and other elements around "pure vs mixed" states at length in the other thread. Your point is that an entangled pair, while itself in a superposition of states, cannot be decomposed into or otherwise considered as 2 particles each in an individual superposition. Else it would be a product state, and it can't be if its entangled too. Does that sum it up?
 
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  • #15
DrChinese said:
Your point is that an entangled pair, while itself in a superposition of states, cannot be decomposed into or otherwise considered as 2 particles each in an individual superposition. Else it would be a product state, and it can't be if its entangled too. Does that sum it up?

Yes - very nicely put. Much better than I managed :wideeyed:
 
  • #16
Entangled particle can't be in pure state (superposition). But if we model mixed state as classical mixture of pure states then entangled particle can't be in mixed state either. So it has to be something third with uncertain (undefined) polarization.
 
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  • #17
zonde said:
But if we model mixed state as classical mixture of pure states then entangled particle can't be in mixed state either.

Why do you say this?

You're not correct, because that's exactly what we have - each of the individual particles in an entangled state is described by a mixed state that is formally identical to a statistical mixture of pure states.

Look at vanhees' post number 8 above - which bit of that post don't you get?
 
  • #18
Simon Phoenix said:
Look at vanhees' post number 8 above - which bit of that post don't you get?
Can the second equation describe single photon or it necessarily describes at least two photons?
 
  • #19
zonde said:
Entangled particle can't be in pure state (superposition). But if we model mixed state as classical mixture of pure states then entangled particle can't be in mixed state either. So it has to be something third with uncertain (undefined) polarization.

A particle can always be in an improper mixed state. You get the corresponding density matrix by tracing out all degrees of freedom not associated with that particle.
 
  • #20
Dadface said:
Thanks to all. That's got me looking up the difference between superposition of states and mixture of states as they relate to opposite states. Is it true to say that if a photon is in superposition it will be in opposite states simultaneously whereas if its a mixture it moves between opposite states but at any particular time is in one state only.

If a photon is in a superposition, then there is one way to measure the photon (i.e., a measurement basis) where you will get the same outcome 100 percent of the time.

For example, if you have a diagonally polarized photon, it can be expressed as a superposition of horizontal and vertical polarization. If you measure in the horizontal/vertical basis, you will have a 50/50 chance of getting either result.
On the other hand, if you measure in the diagonal/antidiagonal basis, you will measure the diagonal result 100 percent of the time.

If a photon is in a mixed state, then there is no such basis where you can get the same outcome all the time. This for example corresponds to the statistics of unpolarized light, where you get 50/50 chances of either measurement result in all measurement bases.
 
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  • #21
zonde said:
Can the second equation describe single photon or it necessarily describes at least two photons?

The second equation of Vanhees there is obtained by tracing out the degrees of freedom associated with one of the photons - so it is describing the state of just ONE of the photons in the entangled pair.

Suppose I had two entangled particles. I put one in a box and give it to you. Now if that's all you have access to then what you have is described by a statistical mixture. That's what is meant by the tracing procedure - it's just focusing on part of a bigger picture*. If you can only do measurements on the particle I've given you, you can't even tell whether it's one of an entangled pair. All of the single-particle properties you can measure can be worked out from this statistical mixture.

*Of course we don't have to actually physically separate things into 'boxes', the properties of just one of the entangled particles are described by a statistical mixture whether or not we actually perform the physical separation. I just think it gives a more vivid description in terms of actually physically separating things.
 
  • #22
Thanks again. The way I see it so far is that to get a mixed state we need a collection of photons but superposition states can apply to single photons only as well as to collections of photons. Is that true?
 
  • #23
Simon Phoenix said:
That's what is meant by the tracing procedure - it's just focusing on part of a bigger picture*.
What you say is that by tracing out A from composite system AB we are left with only the information relevant to B alone. And if we trace out B then we have only the information relevant to A alone. Ok, but it should mean that we can combine A and B back together but we are simply uncertain how to do it properly, right? So if I show that it can't be done then your statement is false, right?
 
  • #24
zonde said:
What you say is that by tracing out A from composite system AB we are left with only the information relevant to B alone. And if we trace out B then we have only the information relevant to A alone. Ok, but it should mean that we can combine A and B back together but we are simply uncertain how to do it properly, right? So if I show that it can't be done then your statement is false, right?

No. When you perform a trace, you lose information. The state of the composite system cannot be recovered uniquely from the mixed states of A and B separately. A concrete example: in EPR, an electron/positron pair is created. The electron goes to Alice and the positron goes to Bob.

The state of Alice's electron, calculated by tracing out Bob's positron, is a mixed state with equal probability of being spin-up or spin-down.

The state of Bob's positron is also a mixed state with equal probability of spin-up or spin-down.

Putting those two states together doesn't say anything about whether Alice's electron's spin-state is correlated with Bob's positron's spin-state. That information is lost when you perform the traces.
 
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  • #25
Dadface said:
The way I see it so far is that to get a mixed state we need a collection of photons but superposition states can apply to single photons only as well as to collections of photons. Is that true?
That is my understanding too but if I got it right you can speak about single particle in a mixed state too if you are using Bayesian interpretation of probabilities.
 
  • #26
stevendaryl said:
No. When you perform a trace, you lose information.
But this is exactly what I said, no?
zonde said:
Ok, but it should mean that we can combine A and B back together but we are simply uncertain how to do it properly, right?
Isn't this (in bold) the same thing as "cannot be recovered uniquely"? :oldconfused:
 
  • #27
zonde said:
So if I show that it can't be done then your statement is false, right?

which particular statement of mine do you think is false?
 
  • #28
Simon Phoenix said:
which particular statement of mine do you think is false?
The bold part:
Simon Phoenix said:
Suppose I had two entangled particles. I put one in a box and give it to you. Now if that's all you have access to then what you have is described by a statistical mixture.
 
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  • #29
Just to explain the partial tracing out. If you have a composite system of parts ##A## and ##B## a general state (statistical operator) can be written in terms of complete orthonormal sets of vectors ##|A_i,B_j \rangle:=|A_i \rangle \otimes |B_j \rangle## as follows
$$\hat{\rho}_{AB}=\sum_{i,j,k,l} P_{ij,kl} |A_i ,B_j \rangle \langle A_k,B_l|,$$
where
$$P_{ij} \geq 0, \quad \sum_{i,j} P_{ij}=1.$$
Then the partial trace over ##B##, describing the state (statistical operator) of subsystem ##A## is given by
$$\hat{\rho}_A=\mathrm{Tr}_B \hat{\rho}_{AB}=\sum_{i,k} |A_i \rangle \langle A_k| \sum_j P_{ij,kj}.$$
 
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  • #30
@zonde

So, you think that if we have an entangled state such as that described by Vanhees in post #8 then the state of one of the photons is not given by the second equation in that post?

Interesting - have fun trying to prove it is incorrect :biggrin:
 
  • #31
Simon Phoenix said:
Interesting - have fun trying to prove it is incorrect :biggrin:
Thanks
I will use counter example approach. It should be valid way to disprove general statement by showing that in some particular case this general statement does not hold.

So we will take entangled state:
$$|\Phi \rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} (|H_1H_2 \rangle-|V_1V_2 \rangle),$$
for which each part separately is described by mixed states:
$$\hat{\rho_1}=\frac{1}{2} (|H_1 \rangle \langle H_1|+|V_1 \rangle \langle V_1|).$$
$$\hat{\rho_2}=\frac{1}{2} (|H_2 \rangle \langle H_2|+|V_2 \rangle \langle V_2|).$$
as these are statistical mixtures we can take each polarization state as separate subensemble and do the calculations on it alone.
So let us take subensembles ##|H_1 \rangle \langle H_1|## and ##|H_2 \rangle \langle H_2|##. Now I would like to recover part of information concerning full state, in particular that for these two subensembles we can establish one to one correspondence between individual photon detections and later calculate correlations.
Next we look at expectation value for polarization measurement of ##|H_1 \rangle \langle H_1|## at an angle of 30o. I am not so good with operators and matrices so I will simply use Malu's law and it gives us ##p_1=\cos^2 \frac{\pi}{6}=0.75##.
Then we calculate expectation value for polarization measurement of ##|H_2 \rangle \langle H_2|## at an angle of -30o. Again using Malu's law it gives us ##p_2=\cos^2 -\frac{\pi}{6}=0.75##.
So without having full information we can't say how big is expectation value for coincidences but we can confidently say that it can't be less than 0.5 from measurements of two subensembles (c=0.75-(1-0.75)). We get the same result by considering subensembles ##|V_1 \rangle \langle V_1|## and ##|V_2 \rangle \langle V_2|##. So average expectation value of coincidence rate of both pairs of statistical subensembles too can't be less than 0.5.
However prediction worked out using full entangled state gives us expectation value for coincidences at 60° (30° - -30°) ##p=\cos^2 \frac{\pi}{3}=0.25## that is less than 0.5. So there is no possible way how we could construct full entangled state from statistical subensembles of separate photons for particular case we considered. QED
 
  • #32
zonde said:
So there is no possible way how we could construct full entangled state from statistical subensembles of separate photons for particular case we considered

First off, I'm somewhat baffled by your logic. You appear to be saying that because there is no way to uniquely recover (or construct) the full density operator given only the reduced density operators (which is true, there is no unique way so that the reduced density operators correspond to more than one possible full density operator) then the reduced density operators cannot be a correct description for the individual components in an entangled pair. I do apologize but your logic here completely escapes me.

Secondly, if we have a photon in the state |H><H| + |V><V|, then measurement of linear polarization in any direction will give the result 'horizontal' or 'vertical' (in that direction) with equal probability. There's no way to infer anything about the coincidence counts from the reduced density operators - for that you have to examine correlations in the results, but then you are accessing some of the information about the global state. When you look at the two component parts individually - mathematically represented by the tracing operation - you are 'losing' or neglecting an amount of information equal to the mutual information of the global state. For an entangled system you can recover up to half of this information, but not all, by making measurements on each component part and comparing results (this is a general result for bipartite entangled systems).
 
  • #33
Simon Phoenix said:
First off, I'm somewhat baffled by your logic. You appear to be saying that because there is no way to uniquely recover (or construct) the full density operator given only the reduced density operators (which is true, there is no unique way) then the reduced density operators cannot be a correct description for the individual components in an entangled pair. I do apologize but your logic here completely escapes me.
Let's deal with this first. Where do you see I said there is no unique way how to recover full state? I said there is absolutely no way (unique or not) how you can match prediction worked out from full state to any possible prediction worked out from statistical mixture of separate states in particular case considered.
 
  • #34
zonde said:
I said there is absolutely no way (unique or not) how you can match prediction worked out from full state to any possible prediction worked out from statistical mixture of separate states in particular case considered

Maybe there's a problem with semantics here, but if I have the density operators
|0><0| + |1><1| for particle 1 and a similar one for particle 2 then I can most certainly construct several possibilities for the global density operator.
|00><00| + |11><11| is one possibility
|0><0| + |1><1| ⊗ |0><0| + |1><1| is another
and so on
What I can't do is, just by looking at experimental results on each component system independently, distinguish between the possibilities. By independently here I mean by not considering any correlation - if we look at correlation we're no longer simply considering just the reduced density operators!

Of course you can't predict the statistics of measurements of the joint properties from consideration of the component parts independently! That's obvious - but it proves nothing more than the whole is more than the sum of its parts. You can't do this with classical correlations either. Tell me, can you construct a unique joint probability distribution P(a,b) from consideration of the marginal distributions P(a) and P(b) alone?

By your argument the impossibility of reconstructing P(a,b) would lead you to say that, therefore, the marginal distributions don't give us the correct statistics for the component systems independently - and are therefore incorrect. This, I hope you will agree, would be an absurd argument.

The reduced density operators are a kind of quantum analogue of the marginal distributions.
 
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  • #35
zonde said:
But this is exactly what I said, no?

I was reacting to the sentence

Ok, but it should mean that we can combine A and B back together

It doesn't mean that. We can't combine A and B back together to get the state of the composite system.

Also, you said:

So if I show that it can't be done then your statement is false, right?

That's also not correct. It's true that it can't be done (the recombination), but that doesn't contradict anything Simon said.
 

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