English

Physically Realizable Entanglement by Local Continuous Measurements

Quantum Physics 2011-02-16 v2 Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics Statistical Mechanics

Abstract

Quantum systems prepared in pure states evolve into mixtures under environmental action. Physically realizable ensembles are the pure state decompositions of those mixtures that can be generated in time through continuous measurements of the environment. Here, we define physically realizable entanglement as the average entanglement over realizable ensembles. We optimize the measurement strategy to maximize and minimize this quantity through local observations on the independent environments that cause two qubits to disentangle in time. We then compare it with the entanglement bounds for the unmonitored system. For some relevant noise sources the maximum realizable entanglement coincides with the upper bound, establishing the scheme as an alternative to locally protect entanglement. However, for local strategies, the lower bound of the unmonitored system is not reached.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1006.1233,
  title  = {Physically Realizable Entanglement by Local Continuous Measurements},
  author = {Eduardo Mascarenhas and Daniel Cavalcanti and Vlatko Vedral and Marcelo Franca Santos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1006.1233},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

version 2; 5 pages, 1 figure; added references;

R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:32:45.960Z