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---
title: "Quantum entanglement"
sort_title: "Quantum entanglement"
date: 2021-03-07
categories:
- Physics
- Quantum mechanics
- Quantum information
layout: "concept"
---
Consider a composite quantum system which consists of two subsystems $$A$$ and $$B$$,
respectively with basis states $$\Ket{a_n}$$ and $$\Ket{b_n}$$.
All accessible states of the sytem $$\Ket{\Psi}$$ lie in
the tensor product of the subsystems'
[Hilbert spaces](/know/concept/hilbert-space/) $$\mathbb{H}_A$$ and $$\mathbb{H}_B$$:
$$\begin{aligned}
\Ket{\Psi} \in \mathbb{H}_A \otimes \mathbb{H}_B
\end{aligned}$$
A subset of these states can be written as the tensor product (i.e. Kronecker product in a basis)
of a state $$\Ket{\alpha}$$ in $$A$$ and a state $$\Ket{\beta}$$ in $$B$$,
often abbreviated as $$\Ket{\alpha} \Ket{\beta}$$:
$$\begin{aligned}
\Ket{\Psi}
= \Ket{\alpha} \Ket{\beta}
= \Ket{\alpha} \otimes \Ket{\beta}
\end{aligned}$$
The states that can be written in this way are called **separable**,
and states that cannot are called **entangled**.
Therefore, we are dealing with **quantum entanglement**
if the state of subsystem $$A$$ cannot be fully described
independently of the state of subsystem $$B$$, and vice versa.
To detect and quantify entanglement,
we can use the [density operator](/know/concept/density-operator/) $$\hat{\rho}$$.
For a pure ensemble in a given (possibly entangled) state $$\Ket{\Psi}$$,
$$\hat{\rho}$$ is given by:
$$\begin{aligned}
\hat{\rho} = \Ket{\Psi} \Bra{\Psi}
\end{aligned}$$
From this, we would like to extract the corresponding state of subsystem $$A$$.
For that purpose, we define the **reduced density operator** $$\hat{\rho}_A$$ of subsystem $$A$$ as follows:
$$\begin{aligned}
\boxed{
\hat{\rho}_A
= \Tr_B(\hat{\rho})
= \sum_m \Bra{b_m} \Big( \hat{\rho} \Big) \Ket{b_m}
}
\end{aligned}$$
Where $$\Tr_B(\hat{\rho})$$ is called the **partial trace** of $$\hat{\rho}$$,
which basically eliminates subsystem $$B$$ from $$\hat{\rho}$$.
For a pure composite state $$\Ket{\Psi}$$,
the resulting $$\hat{\rho}_A$$ describes a pure state in $$A$$ if $$\Ket{\Psi}$$ is separable,
else, if $$\Ket{\Psi}$$ is entangled, it describes a mixed state in $$A$$.
In the former case we simply find:
$$\begin{aligned}
\boxed{
\Ket{\Psi} = \Ket{\alpha} \otimes \Ket{\beta}
\quad \implies \quad
\hat{\rho}_A = \Ket{\alpha} \Bra{\alpha}
}
\end{aligned}$$
We call $$\Ket{\Psi}$$ **maximally entangled**
if its reduced density operators are **maximally mixed**,
where $$N$$ is the dimension of $$\mathbb{H}_A$$ and $$\hat{I}$$ is the identity matrix:
$$\begin{aligned}
\hat{\rho}_A
= \frac{1}{N} \hat{I}
\end{aligned}$$
Suppose that we are given an entangled pure state
$$\Ket{\Psi} \neq \Ket{\alpha} \otimes \Ket{\beta}$$.
Then the partial traces $$\hat{\rho}_A$$ and $$\hat{\rho}_B$$
of $$\hat{\rho} = \Ket{\Psi} \Bra{\Psi}$$ are mixed states with the same probabilities $$p_n$$
(assuming $$\mathbb{H}_A$$ and $$\mathbb{H}_B$$ have the same dimensions,
which is usually the case):
$$\begin{aligned}
\hat{\rho}_A
= \Tr_B(\hat{\rho})
= \sum_n p_n \Ket{a_n} \Bra{a_n}
\qquad \quad
\hat{\rho}_B
= \Tr_A(\hat{\rho})
= \sum_n p_n \Ket{b_n} \Bra{b_n}
\end{aligned}$$
There exists an orthonormal choice
of the subsystem basis states $$\Ket{a_n}$$ and $$\Ket{b_n}$$,
such that $$\Ket{\Psi}$$ can be written as follows,
where $$p_n$$ are the probabilities in the reduced density operators:
$$\begin{aligned}
\Ket{\Psi}
= \sum_n \sqrt{p_n} \Big( \Ket{a_n} \otimes \Ket{b_n} \Big)
\end{aligned}$$
This is the **Schmidt decomposition**,
and the **Schmidt number** is the number of nonzero terms in the summation,
which can be used to determine if the state $$\Ket{\Psi}$$
is entangled (greater than one) or separable (equal to one).
By looking at the Schmidt decomposition, we can notice that,
if $$\hat{O}_A$$ and $$\hat{O}_B$$ are the subsystem observables
with basis eigenstates $$\Ket{a_n}$$ and $$\Ket{b_n}$$,
then measurement results of these operators
will be perfectly correlated across $$A$$ and $$B$$.
This is a general property of entangled systems,
but beware: correlation does not imply entanglement!
But what if the composite system is in a mixed state $$\hat{\rho}$$?
The state is separable if and only if:
$$\begin{aligned}
\boxed{
\hat{\rho}
= \sum_m p_m \Big( \hat{\rho}_A \otimes \hat{\rho}_B \Big)
}
\end{aligned}$$
Where $$p_m$$ are probabilities,
and $$\hat{\rho}_A$$ and $$\hat{\rho}_B$$ can be any subsystem states.
In reality, it is very hard to determine, using this criterium,
whether an arbitrary given $$\hat{\rho}$$ is separable or not.
As a final side note, the expectation value
of an obervable $$\hat{O}_A$$ acting only on $$A$$ is given by:
$$\begin{aligned}
\expval{\hat{O}_A}
= \Tr\!\big(\hat{\rho} \hat{O}_A\big)
= \Tr_A\!\big(\Tr_B(\hat{\rho} \hat{O}_A)\big)
= \Tr_A\!\big(\Tr_B(\hat{\rho}) \hat{O}_A)\big)
= \Tr_A\!\big(\hat{\rho}_A \hat{O}_A\big)
\end{aligned}$$
## References
1. J.B. Brask,
*Quantum information: lecture notes*,
2021, unpublished.
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