Quantifying Quantum Coherence in Experimentally-Observed Neutrino Oscillations
Xue-Ke Song, Yanqi Huang, Jiajie Ling, and Man-Hong Yung

TL;DR
This paper quantifies the quantum coherence in neutrino oscillations observed over long distances using quantum resource theory, providing new insights beyond previous Leggett-Garg inequality tests.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to measure neutrino quantumness with quantum resource theory, analyzing multiple neutrino sources and distances.
Findings
Maximal coherence observed in Kamland neutrinos.
Coherence can reach up to 40% of the maximum.
Longest distance for quantumness detection in neutrinos.
Abstract
Neutrino oscillation represents an intriguing physical phenomenon where the quantumness can be maintained and detected over a long distance. Previously, the non-classical character of neutrino oscillation was tested with the Leggett-Garg inequality, where a clear violation of the classical bound was observed [J. A. Formaggio et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 050402 (2016)]. However, there are several limitations in testing neutrino oscillations with the Leggett-Garg inequality. In particular, the degree of violation of the Leggett-Garg inequality cannot be taken as a "measure of quantumness". Here we focus on quantifying the quantumness of experimentally-observed neutrino oscillation, using the tools of recently-developed quantum resource theory. We analyzed ensembles of reactor and accelerator neutrinos at distinct energies from a variety of neutrino sources, including Daya Bay (0.5 km and…
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