Unveiling the Dynamical Genesis of Quantum Entanglement in Linear Systems: Internal causality breaking in the reduced subsystem evolution
Shuang-Kai Yang, Wei-Min Zhang

TL;DR
This paper reveals that internal causality violations in the reduced dynamics of linear quantum systems can lead to the spontaneous emergence of entanglement, offering a fundamental mechanism for quantum correlations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that causality breaking in subsystem evolution causes entanglement formation in linear quantum systems, a novel insight into quantum dynamics.
Findings
Causality violation in subsystem evolution leads to entanglement.
Linear coupling alone does not produce entanglement without causality breaking.
The mechanism applies broadly to complex quantum systems.
Abstract
Utilizing the general theory of open quantum systems to investigate the exact dynamical evolution of simple bilinear systems, we discover a mechanism of the dynamical genesis of quantum entanglement. We focus in detail on the exact quantum evolution dynamics of two photonic modes (or any two bosonic modes) coupled to each other through a linear interaction, as the simplest system of open quantum systems that we have investigated in the last two decades. Such a linear coupling alone fails to produce two-mode entanglement. We also start with an initially separable pure state of the two modes. By solving exactly the quantum equation of motion without relying on the probabilistic interpretation, we find that when the initial state of one mode is different from a coherent state (a minimum uncertainty wave packet with equal variance in the conjugate quadratures that corresponds to a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications
