How can a ground state of free particles have entanglement?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of entanglement in the context of free fermions and how it differs from the more commonly studied examples. While a noninteracting electron gas may not seem like a typical example of entanglement, there is a nonlocal effect present in the exchange phase of the fermions. This can be seen more clearly in the case of anyons, where circling one anyon around another results in a phase difference in the multiparticle wavefunction. The conversation also suggests calculating the wavefunction using antisymmetrization to better understand this concept.
  • #1
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Can somebody clear the fog in front of my eyes: how can a Hamiltonian describing free fermions have a ground state with non-trivial entanglement? My reasoning is: we can build the ground state in the independent electron approximation (which is now exact), hence it is a product state in the position base, hence trivial entanglement!

However, this seems far from true. (An extreme counter-example: the ground state of QHE even has long-range entanglement...)
 
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  • #2
It's important in this context to define what we mean by entanglement--a box of a bunch of free fermions (a noninteracting electron gas, for example) aren't a typical example when we study "entanglement." A more common example would be something like entangled photons traveling away from one another, like in the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox or Bell's theorem. With those cases, we easily see the nonlocal effects of entanglement, but with an electron gas, what kind of measurement would probe entanglement? You see that it's a farther reach.

However, there IS a kind of nonlocal phenomenon in fermion gasses that you could describe as "entanglement." It's simpler than you would imagine: the exchange phase of e=-1 from swapping any two fermions. (This is just elementary spin-statistics.) It's still hard to imagine an experiment that would probe this nonlocal effect. It is actually easier to create an example using an "anyon" or a particle with an arbitrary exchange phase e. I see you've mentioned the QHE so you should be able to follow this argument.

If we started with two identical copies of an anyon gas, and without changing either one, somehow performed an Aharanov-Bohm type experiment to look at their relative phase, we'd obviously see no phase difference. However, if before performing the experiment, we first took one of the identical copies and somehow circled one anyon around another (recall that anyons are only observed to exist in 2-d systems), keeping all the other anyons in place, then when we perform the same aharanov-bohm experiment on the gasses, we would observe a phase difference equal to e2iθ. The difference in phases is between the multiparticle wavefunctions of the entire gas--not just the individual anyons that were in the looping process. Thus we see the entire multiparticle wavefunction changes due to the local process of circling one anyon around the other. This is a nonlocal effect we could describe as "entanglement."

For a fermion gas, you wouldn't see anything from that experiment because the exchange phase is e, so the phase accumulated when you loop one fermion around another is e2iπ=1. But the concept is still there. The reason is that the wavefunction is not just the direct product of individual electron states--it has to be antisymmetrized.
 
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  • #3
Thanks for the reply but I feel it misses the point. I'm not talking about anything special, just take for example entanglement entropy as a measure...
 
  • #4
I'm not exactly sure what "entanglement entropy" is, but why don't you take my suggestion--instead of the direct product of fermion states, form the correct wavefunction, the antisymmetrized version--and calculate it for yourself and see if you get what you want.

(Remember that even though the fermions are noninteracting, they still must obey Pauli exclusion.)Edit: Here's a nice wiki article on how to antisymmetrize fermionic wavefunctions and how it relates to the exchange phase/pauli exclusion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slater_determinant
 
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Related to How can a ground state of free particles have entanglement?

1. What is entanglement?

Entanglement is a phenomenon in quantum physics where 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 separated by large distances. This means that the particles are no longer separate entities, but rather behave as a single system.

2. How can a ground state of free particles have entanglement?

In quantum physics, particles do not exist in a single, well-defined state, but rather exist in a superposition of many possible states. This means that even in the ground state, particles can have multiple possible states. When these particles interact with each other, they can become entangled and share a single state, even in the ground state.

3. What is the significance of entanglement in quantum physics?

Entanglement is a fundamental aspect of quantum mechanics and has been shown to have important applications in fields such as quantum computing, cryptography, and communication. It also challenges our understanding of the classical world, as entanglement is a purely quantum phenomenon that has no classical analogue.

4. Can entanglement be observed in macroscopic objects?

While entanglement has been observed in small particles, such as photons and electrons, it is difficult to observe in macroscopic objects due to their complex interactions with the environment. However, recent experiments have shown evidence of entanglement in larger systems, such as superconducting circuits and mechanical oscillators.

5. How is entanglement created?

Entanglement can be created through various methods, such as spontaneous emission, where two particles are created simultaneously and share a single state, or through interactions between particles. Entanglement can also be intentionally created through quantum operations, such as the controlled use of lasers or other quantum systems.

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