Two-electron quantum walks can probe entanglement and decoherence in an electron microscope
Offek Tziperman, David Nabben, Ron Ruimy, Jacob Holder, Ethan Nussinson, Yiqi Fang, Alexey Gorlach, Daniel Kazenwadel, Aviv Karnieli, Ido Kaminer, Peter Baum

TL;DR
This study introduces a two-electron quantum walk method to analyze entanglement and decoherence in free electrons within an electron microscope, revealing high-contrast correlations but limited entanglement due to decoherence effects.
Contribution
It presents a novel quantum walk technique for tomography of electron pairs, enabling the study of quantum effects in free-electron systems with potential applications in quantum microscopy.
Findings
High contrast electron-electron correlations observed
No significant electron-electron entanglement detected
Decoherence effects limit quantum purity in the system
Abstract
Classical physics is often a good approximation for quantum systems composed of many interacting particles, although wavepacket dispersion and scattering processes continuously induce delocalization and entanglement. According to decoherence theory, an entangled ensemble can appear classical when only a subset of all particles is observed. This emergence of macroscopic phenomena from quantum interactions is, for example, relevant for phase transitions, quantum thermalization, hydrodynamics, spin liquids, or time crystals. However, entanglement and decoherence in free electrons have not yet been explored, although the electron is a fundamental elementary particle with extraordinary technological relevance. Here, we investigate the degree of coherence and entanglement in a free-space electron gas in the beam of an ultrafast electron microscope. We introduce a two-electron quantum walk…
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