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  2. Quantum entanglement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement

    Quantum entanglement has been demonstrated experimentally with photons, [12] [13] electrons, [14] [15] top quarks, [16] molecules [17] and even small diamonds. [18] The use of quantum entanglement in communication and computation is an active area of research and development.

  3. Quantum decoherence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_decoherence

    In classical scattering of a target body by environmental photons, the motion of the target body will not be changed by the scattered photons on the average. In quantum scattering, the interaction between the scattered photons and the superposed target body will cause them to be entangled, thereby delocalizing the phase coherence from the target body to the whole system, rendering the ...

  4. Quantum mechanics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics

    Quantum decoherence is a mechanism through which quantum systems lose coherence, and thus become incapable of displaying many typically quantum effects: quantum superpositions become simply probabilistic mixtures, and quantum entanglement becomes simply classical correlations.

  5. Density matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density_matrix

    A pure quantum state is a state that can not be written as a probabilistic mixture, or convex combination, of other quantum states. [5] There are several equivalent characterizations of pure states in the language of density operators. [9]: 73 A density operator represents a pure state if and only if:

  6. Macroscopic quantum phenomena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroscopic_quantum_phenomena

    Macroscopic quantum phenomena are processes showing quantum behavior at the macroscopic scale, rather than at the atomic scale where quantum effects are prevalent. The best-known examples of macroscopic quantum phenomena are superfluidity and superconductivity ; other examples include the quantum Hall effect , Josephson effect and topological ...

  7. Coherence (physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherence_(physics)

    They introduced coherence monotones analogous to the entanglement monotones. [27] Quantum coherence has been shown to be equivalent to quantum entanglement [28] in the sense that coherence can be faithfully described as entanglement, and conversely that each entanglement measure corresponds to a coherence measure.

  8. Bell state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_state

    For entanglement in a single qubit variable, only three distinct classes out of four Bell states are distinguishable using such linear optical techniques. This means two Bell states cannot be distinguished from each other, limiting the efficiency of quantum communication protocols such as teleportation. If a Bell state is measured from this ...

  9. Entanglement distillation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entanglement_distillation

    Quantum teleportation is able to achieve faithful transmission of quantum information by substituting classical communication and prior entanglement for a direct quantum channel. Using teleportation, an arbitrary unknown qubit can be faithfully transmitted via a pair of maximally-entangled qubits shared between sender and receiver, and a 2-bit ...