Quantum Entanglement for Systems of Identical Bosons. II Spin Squeezing and Other Entanglement Tests
Bryan Dalton, John Goold, Barry Garraway, Margaret Reid

TL;DR
This paper explores how entanglement in systems of identical bosons, like Bose-Einstein condensates, can be detected using spin squeezing and other tests, emphasizing the importance of symmetrisation and super-selection rules.
Contribution
It introduces new inequalities and analysis methods for detecting entanglement in massive bosonic systems, extending previous work on quantum correlations.
Findings
Derived new inequalities for entanglement detection.
Analyzed recent experiments on two-mode Bose-Einstein condensates.
Clarified the role of symmetrisation and super-selection rules in entanglement tests.
Abstract
These two accompanying papers treat two mode entanglement for systems of identical massive bosons and the relationship to spin squeezing and other quantum correlation effects. Entanglement is a key quantum feature of composite systems where the probabilities for joint measurements on the composite sub-systems are no longer determined from measurement probabilities on the separate sub-systems. We focus on the meaning of entanglement, the quantum paradoxes associated with entangled states, and important tests that allow an experimentalist to determine whether a quantum state - in particular, one for massive bosons is entangled. Our tests for entanglement fully utilise the symmetrisation principle and super-selection rules for bosonic massive particles. These papers provides detailed arguments necessary for the conclusions of a recent paper which presented results for rigorously…
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