4.8 Article

Spatial entanglement of bosons in optical lattices

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3161

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. EU Integrated Project QES-SENCE
  2. EU STREPs CORNER
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Professorship
  4. BMBF
  5. MIUR through PRIN [2009TM7ERK_004]
  6. ERC Advanced Grant DISQUA
  7. EU FP7 Integrated Project AQUTE
  8. IIT Seed Project ENCORE
  9. EU FP7 Marie-Curie Programme (Intra-European Fellowship)
  10. EU FP7 Marie-Curie Programme (Career Integration Grant)
  11. MIUR-FIRB grant [RBFR10M3SB]

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Entanglement is a fundamental resource for quantum information processing, occurring naturally in many-body systems at low temperatures. The presence of entanglement and, in particular, its scaling with the size of system partitions underlies the complexity of quantum many-body states. The quantitative estimation of entanglement in many-body systems represents a major challenge, as it requires either full-state tomography, scaling exponentially in the system size, or the assumption of unverified system characteristics such as its Hamiltonian or temperature. Here we adopt recently developed approaches for the determination of rigorous lower entanglement bounds from readily accessible measurements and apply them in an experiment of ultracold interacting bosons in optical lattices of similar to 10(5) sites. We then study the behaviour of spatial entanglement between the sites when crossing the superfluid-Mott insulator transition and when varying temperature. This constitutes the first rigorous experimental large-scale entanglement quantification in a scalable quantum simulator.

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