Entanglement Sustainability in Quantum Radar
Ahmad Salmanogli, Dincer Gokcen, H. Selcuk Gecim

TL;DR
This paper investigates how entanglement behaves in a quantum radar system, analyzing the effects of various parameters on entanglement preservation through quantum electrodynamics and system dynamics simulations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of entanglement dynamics in quantum radar, highlighting the impact of system design and medium parameters on entanglement sustainability.
Findings
Entanglement can be maintained through careful system design.
Amplifier features influence entanglement preservation.
Quantum electrodynamics effectively models entanglement behavior.
Abstract
Quantum radar is generally defined as a detection sensor that utilizes the microwave photons like a classical radar. At the same time, it employs quantum phenomena to improve detection, identification, and resolution capabilities. However, the entanglement is so fragile, unstable, and difficult to create and to preserve for a long time. Also, more importantly, the entangled states have a tendency to leak away as a result of noise. The points mentioned above enforces that the entangled states should be carefully studied at each step of the quantum radar detection processes as follows. Firstly, the creation of the entanglement between microwave and optical photons into the tripartite system is realized. Secondly, the entangled microwave photons are intensified. Thirdly, the intensified photons are propagated into the atmosphere (attenuation medium) and reflected from a target. Finally,…
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