Quantum Entanglement at High Temperatures? II. Bosonic Systems in Nonequilibrium Steady State
Jen-Tsung Hsiang, B. L. Hu

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether quantum entanglement can be maintained at high temperatures in bosonic systems under nonequilibrium steady state conditions with constant coupling, finding that entanglement generally diminishes above a critical temperature.
Contribution
It provides an exact analysis of entanglement dynamics in coupled quantum harmonic oscillators in NESS, revealing the conditions under which entanglement persists or vanishes at high temperatures.
Findings
Entanglement is not solely determined by temperature difference.
A critical temperature exists above which entanglement disappears.
Strong system-bath coupling affects the critical temperature.
Abstract
This is the second of a series of three papers examining how viable it is for entanglement to be sustained at high temperatures for quantum systems in thermal equilibrium (Case A), in nonequilibrium (Case B) and in nonequilibrium steady state conditions (Case C). The system we analyze here consists of two coupled quantum harmonic oscillators each interacting with its own bath described by a scalar field, set at temperatures . For \textit{constant bilinear inter-oscillator coupling} studied here (Case C1) owing to the Gaussian nature, the problem can be solved exactly at arbitrary temperatures even for strong coupling. We find that the valid entanglement criterion in general is not a function of the bath temperature difference, in contrast to thermal transport in the same NESS setting [1]. Thus lowering the temperature of one of the thermal baths does not necessarily help to…
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