Qudits for Witnessing Quantum Gravity Induced Entanglement of Masses Under Decoherence
Jules Tilly, Ryan J. Marshman, Anupam Mazumdar, Sougato Bose

TL;DR
This paper compares different quantum system configurations for witnessing gravity-induced entanglement, finding that qubits outperform other models without decoherence, but higher-dimensional qudits are needed under decoherence, with implications for experimental design.
Contribution
It analyzes various experimental setups for quantum gravity tests, identifying optimal configurations and measurement strategies under different decoherence conditions.
Findings
Qubits outperform other models without decoherence.
High decoherence favors multi-component superpositions.
Measurement requirements increase significantly with decoherence.
Abstract
Recently a theoretical and an experimental protocol known as quantum gravity induced entanglement of masses (QGEM) has been proposed to test the quantum nature of gravity using two mesoscopic masses each placed in a superposition of two locations. If, after eliminating all non-gravitational interactions between them, the particles become entangled, one can conclude that the gravitational potential is induced via a quantum mediator, i.e. a virtual graviton. In this paper, we examine a range of different experimental set-ups, considering different geometries and the number of spatially superposed states taken, in order to determine which would generate entanglement faster. We conclude that without decoherence, and given a maximum distance between any two spatial states of a superposition, a set of two qubits placed in spatial superposition parallel to one another will…
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