Gravitationally-induced entanglement between two massive particles is sufficient evidence of quantum effects in gravity
Chiara Marletto, Vlatko Vedral

TL;DR
This paper proposes an experiment where two masses in superposition become entangled through gravity, providing evidence of quantum effects in gravity without needing to control or detect gravitons.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, feasible experiment to demonstrate quantum features of gravity by entanglement, based on quantum-information principles rather than direct detection of gravitons.
Findings
Entanglement between masses implies a quantum mediator.
The proposed experiment is more practical than previous methods.
It offers an indirect test of gravity's quantization.
Abstract
All existing quantum gravity proposals share the same deep problem. Their predictions are extremely hard to test in practice. Quantum effects in the gravitational field are exceptionally small, unlike those in the electromagnetic field. The fundamental reason is that the gravitational coupling constant is about 43 orders of magnitude smaller than the fine structure constant, which governs light-matter interactions. For example, the detection of gravitons -- the hypothetical quanta of energy of the gravitational field predicted by certain quantum-gravity proposals -- is deemed to be practically impossible. In this letter we adopt a radically different, quantum-information-theoretic approach which circumvents the problem that quantum gravity is hard to test. We propose an experiment to witness quantum-like features in the gravitational field, by probing it with two masses each in a…
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