Solitary waves explore the quantum-to-classical transition
A. Sreedharan, S Kuriyattil, S. Choudhury, R. Mukherjee, A. Streltsov,, and S. W\"uster

TL;DR
This paper investigates how classical behavior emerges from quantum systems by studying collisions of bright solitary waves in Bose-Einstein condensates, revealing a process involving decoherence and entanglement.
Contribution
It demonstrates that soliton collisions can serve as a platform to observe quantum-to-classical transition phenomena, including decoherence and entanglement generation, in a controlled cold atom setting.
Findings
Ensemble phase coherence is lost during soliton collisions.
Decoherence precedes entanglement formation in the system.
Complex interplay between phase coherence and entanglement is observed.
Abstract
It is an open fundamental question how the classical appearance of our environment arises from the underlying quantum many-body theory. We propose that phenomena involved in the quantum-to-classical transition can be probed in collisions of bright solitary waves in Bose- Einstein condensates, where thousands of atoms form a large compound object at ultra cold temperatures. For the experimentally most relevant quasi-1D regime, where integrability is broken through effective three-body interactions, we find that ensembles of solitary waves exhibit complex interplay between phase coherence and entanglement generation in beyond mean-field simulations using the truncated Wigner method: An initial state of two solitons with a well defined relative phase looses that phase coherence in the ensemble, with its single particle two-mode density matrix exhibiting similar dynamics as a decohering two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Strong Light-Matter Interactions · Random lasers and scattering media
