Evidence of indistinguishability and entanglement determined by the energy-time uncertainty principle in a system of two strongly coupled bosonic modes
Smail Bougouffa, Zbigniew Ficek

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how the energy-time uncertainty principle influences indistinguishability and entanglement in a system of two strongly coupled bosonic modes, revealing how decay mechanisms affect quantum correlations and coherence.
Contribution
It shows that antiresonant terms and decay processes determine the system's entanglement and indistinguishability, linking these phenomena to the energy-time uncertainty principle in a novel way.
Findings
Antiresonant terms lead to non-ground state relaxation at short interaction times.
Independent decay yields distinguishable modes with limited interference visibility.
Collective damping results in indistinguishable modes and high-visibility interference.
Abstract
The link of two concepts, indistinguishability and entanglement, with the energy-time uncertainty principle is demonstrated in a system composed of two strongly coupled bosonic modes. Working in the limit of a short interaction time, we find that the inclusion of the antiresonant terms to the coupling Hamiltonian leads the system to relax to a state which is not the ground state of the system. This effect occurs passively by just presence of the antiresonant terms and is explained in terms of the time-energy uncertainty principle for the simple reason that at a very short interaction time, the uncertainty in the energy is of order of the energy of a single excitation, thereby leading to a distribution of the population among the zero, singly and doubly excited states. The population distribution, correlations and entanglement are shown to be substantially depend on whether the modes…
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