Plein écran

Imprimer

Wednesday 27th January  9h00: Theo Nieuwenhuizen (Institute for Theoretical Physics, Amsterdam, Netherlands).
Brownian entanglement — Entanglement in classical Brownian motion.


Abstract:


For two classical Brownian particles an analog of continuous-variable quantum entanglement is presented: The common probability distribution of the two coordinates and the corresponding coarse-grained velocities cannot always be prepared via mixing of any factorized distributions referring to the two particles separately. This is possible for particles which have interacted in the past, but do not interact at present. Three factors are crucial for the effect: (1) separation of time scales of coordinate and momentum which motivates the definition of coarse-grained velocities; (2) the resulting uncertainty relations between the coordinate of the Brownian particle and the change of its coarse-grained velocity; (3) the fact that the coarse-grained velocity, though pertaining to a single Brownian particle, is defined on a common context of two particles. The Brownian entanglement is a consequence of a coarse-grained description and disappears for a finer resolution of the Brownian motion. Analogies with the quantum situation are discussed, as well as possibilities of experimental realization of the effect in examples of macroscopic Brownian motion.

Back to program page

Collaborateur(s) de cette page: Pierre Baudot .
Page dernièrement modifiée le Vendredi 18 décembre, 2009 09:07:13 par Pierre Baudot.