Improving resilience of the Quantum Gravity Induced Entanglement of Masses (QGEM) to decoherence using 3 superpositions
Martine Schut, Jules Tilly, Ryan J. Marshman, Sougato Bose, Anupam, Mazumdar

TL;DR
This paper proposes a three-qubit setup for the QGEM experiment to enhance entanglement resilience against decoherence, enabling more efficient detection of quantum gravity effects through optimized measurement strategies.
Contribution
Introducing a three-qubit configuration in QGEM that improves entanglement generation and robustness, along with optimized measurement protocols for practical experimental implementation.
Findings
Three-qubit setup yields higher entanglement rates.
Enhanced resilience to decoherence with the three-qubit system.
Reduced measurements needed with optimized measurement scheduling.
Abstract
Recently a protocol called quantum gravity induced entanglement of masses (QGEM) that aims to test the quantum nature of gravity using the entanglement of 2 qubits was proposed. The entanglement can arise only if the force between the two spatially superposed masses is occurring via the exchange of a mediating virtual graviton. In this paper, we examine a possible improvement of the QGEM setup by introducing a third mass with an embedded qubit, so that there are now 3 qubits to witness the gravitationally generated entanglement. We compare the entanglement generation for different experimental setups with 2 and 3 qubits and find that a 3-qubit setup where the superpositions are parallel to each other leads to the highest rate of entanglement generation within s. We will show that the 3-qubit setup is more resilient to the higher rate of decoherence. The entanglement can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Noncommutative and Quantum Gravity Theories
