Toward Witnessing Molecular Exciton Entanglement from Spectroscopy
Andrew E. Sifain, Francesca Fassioli, and Gregory D. Scholes

TL;DR
This paper proposes a spectroscopic method to measure quantum entanglement in molecular exciton states, enabling the detection of multipartite entanglement in complex chemical systems through quantum Fisher information analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to estimate quantum Fisher information from spectroscopy, linking optical response to entanglement measurement in molecular aggregates.
Findings
QFI can be extracted from linear response spectra.
Bright eigenstates exhibit maximum QFI.
Realistic dye aggregates show 2-3 partite entanglement.
Abstract
Entanglement is a defining feature of quantum mechanics that can be a resource in engineered and natural systems, but measuring entanglement in experiment remains elusive especially for large chemical systems. Most practical approaches require determining and measuring a suitable entanglement witness which provides some level of information about the entanglement structure of the probed state. A fundamental quantity of quantum metrology is the quantum Fisher information (QFI) which is a rigorous witness of multipartite entanglement that can be evaluated from linear response functions for certain states. In this work, we explore measuring the QFI of molecular exciton states of the first-excitation subspace from spectroscopy. In particular, we utilize the fact that the linear response of a pure state subject to a weak electric field over all possible driving frequencies encodes the…
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