The trace distance between density matrices, a nifty tool in new-physics searches
Marco Fabbrichesi, Matthew Low, Luca Marzola

TL;DR
This paper introduces the trace distance as a powerful quantum information tool for high-energy physics, demonstrating its effectiveness in setting bounds on new physics effects using collider data and simulations.
Contribution
It presents the trace distance as a superior quantum state comparison measure for new physics searches and applies it to collider data, providing the first bounds using quantum tomography.
Findings
Trace distance outperforms other quantum observables in sensitivity.
First bounds on top-quark chromomagnetic dipole moment using quantum tomography.
Projected limits on tau lepton couplings at future colliders.
Abstract
Quantum information methods have been brought to bear on high-energy physics, including the study of entanglement and Bell nonlocality in collider experiments. Quantum information observables have also been employed to constrain possible new physics effects. We improve on this point by introducing quantum information tools routinely used to compare quantum states: the trace distance and the fidelity. We find that the former outperforms other quantum information observables considered in the literature and, together with the cross section, yields the strongest bounds on possible departures from the Standard Model. The power of the proposed methodology is demonstrated with three examples of new physics searches. The first concerns the chromomagnetic dipole moment of the top quark and yields the first bound computed by means of quantum tomography and actual experimental data. The other two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries
