Preprint
Article

This version is not peer-reviewed.

Pionic Entanglement in Femtoscopy: A Lesson in Interference and Indistinguishability

Submitted:

15 August 2023

Posted:

16 August 2023

You are already at the latest version

Abstract
We present an analysis of recent experiments in femtoscopy by the STAR collaboration in terms of the protocol of entanglement witnessing involving purity measurements. The entanglement is between the charge and momentum degrees of freedom of pions and the state purity measurements ultimately rely on the bosonic nature of the detected pions. The pion experiment is intended to measure the size of nuclei and the distance between the nuclei involved, however it indirectly confirms that the states of dfferently charged pions are entangled through an entanglement witness based on the purity of various pionic states. The entangled state of pions can be modelled straightforwardly dynamically using a simple Hamiltonian. Quantum indistinguishability plays a key role in this analysis and we make comparison with the equivalent photonic experiments.
Keywords: 
;  

1. Introduction

The Hanbury-Brown Twiss (HBT) intensity interferometer [1] was invented in order to measure the angular sizes of various astronomical objects like stars. As the name suggests, the key idea is to look at the intensity-intensity correlations between two different detectors receiving light from the same astronomical object. The advantage of the intensity (as opposed to the amplitude) correlations is that they are more robust to fluctuations and therfore more readily accessible. But why would intensities interfere? We normally think of amplitudes interfering, and not the probabilities, which arise by mod squaring the amplitudes. However, interference can take place between intensities for the simple reason that superpositions could also contribute to them. This is clear from the classical wave theory (see a recent creative application of HBT to sound waves [2]), but it is even easier to understand quantum mecanically. Here we will mainly follow the quantum explanation (not because it is easier, but) simply because it is more fundamental, leading - as it does - to the classical one in a special limit of large amplitude coherent states. We will make a further comment on this in the conclusions.
Quantum mechanically, the intensities interfere because of the fact that identical particles, when they are in indistinsguihable states, tend to bunch (bosons) or anti-bunch (fermions). Let us focus on bosons since this is the kind of interference we will be describing in this paper (photons, which are relevant for stellar interferometers and pions which are relevant for nuclear femtoscopy are both bosonic particles).
The reader may find it surprising that the HBT idea can also be used in high energy physics to probe nuclear distances[3]. The principle is the same as in the stellar interferometer and we beriefly review its role in femtoscopy (see e.g. [4,5]) before proceeding to show how it also acts as an entanglement witness. We can think of various high energy nuclear processes as resulting in the emission of pions. In the crudest of approximations, we could represent states of the pions as plane waves. These plane waves are emerging from different parts of the nucleus would then interfere. If we are talking about the pions that have the same charge, then there is an amplitude for two pions to arrive at two detectors in two different ways.
A e i k 1 x 1 e i k 2 x 2 + e i k 1 x 2 e i k 2 x 1
(there should be four different paths in general, but we are assuming that they are pairwise equal; no generality is lost). Given that they are indistinshuishable, we must add up the amplitudes. The interference between these two is the HBT interference and it is an intensity interference as it is to do with the number states of pions. Clearly, the amplitude above is exactly what one would get by doing a completely classical treatment (and this is not sursrising as quantum physics does reproduce the classical wave behaviour in a certain, well-defined, limit). The full quantum calculation would simply have to evolve the pion creation and annihilation operators and then compute the expected values of the resulting number operators (at x 1 and x 2 ). We will show how this is done using a different variant of the HBT experiment.
When we calculate the intensity I = | A | 2 , the relevant terms are the cross terms cos δ k δ x . If we have an extended source, then we have to sum up over all the relevant contributions, and the coherent contribution becomes the Fourier transform of the source (the van-Citter Zernike theorem [6]). In the simplest instance the source could be represented by a top hat function and we then obtain a simple form of the coherence:
C = sin 2 ( k α b / 2 ) ( k α b / 2 ) 2
where k = 2 π / λ , b is the distance between the detectors and α is the angular size of the nucleus (or the star in the case of the original HBT). Therefore, by measuring C (and knowing λ and b) we can then estimate the angular size of the nucleus and therefore its diameter (since we know the distance to the detectors).

2. Analysis

The recent experiment reported in [7] is a variant of HBT. It involves emission of entangled pairs of pions which are then detected by two detectors. Each detector detects two pions, and the possibilities are that detector A detects two positive pions (B therefore detects two negative ones), vice versa, and finally both detectors detect one positive and one negative pion. It is this last possibility that has two indistinguishable ways of happening, which is where the interference occurs. The amplitude for this is given by
A e i k 1 x 1 e i k 2 x 2 e i k 3 x 1 e i k 4 x 2 + e i k 1 x 1 e i k 4 x 1 e i k 2 x 1 e i k 3 x 2
Due to the momentum conservation, there are restrictions on ks, which we will discuss below. Suffice it to say here that a full treatment will lead to the coherence that behaves as
C = sin 2 ( k α b ) ( k α b ) 2 cos 2 ( k β b )
where α is the angular distance between the two sources, and β is the angular width of each of them. This is again a Fourier transform of the convolution of the top hat function (representing each nuclei) with two delta functions (represeting the locations of the nuclei). Note that it contains both the informaiton about the angular size of nuclei as well as the angular distance between them.
In order to show how this experiment is, in fact, a witness of the entanglement between pions, we will now present the full quantum analysis. The brief details of the experiment are as follows. Two gold nuclei are scattered at high energies off one anther. This results in each emitting a rho particles, each of which subsequently decays into a positive and a negative pion. It is these pions that are ultimately detected and produce interference as outlined above.
In order to write down the state of two pions, we need a quantum model for this process [8]. The process of the annihilation of the rho particle and the creation of the two pions is represented by the following Hamiltonian
H = g d x 3 ψ ( x , t ) ψ ( x , t ) ϕ ( x , t )
where g is the strength of the interaction, ϕ ( x , t ) = ϕ + ( x , t ) + ϕ ( x , t ) , ψ ( x , t ) = ψ + ( x , t ) + ψ ( x , t ) and
ϕ ( x , t ) + = k c k e i k μ x μ ϕ ( x , t ) = ( ϕ ( x , t ) + ) ψ ( x , t ) + = k a k e i k μ x μ ψ ( x , t ) = k b k e i k μ x μ ( ψ ( x , t ) ) + = ( ψ ( x , t ) ) ( ψ ( x , t ) ) = ( ψ ( x , t ) + )
where k μ x μ = k x ω t . Here the c operators annihilate the rho meson, the a operators annihilate the positive pion and b the negative pion (and the hermitian conjugates create them). This Hamiltonian is the high energy analogue of the down-conversion process in quantum optics, where a single photon is converted into two photons through a non-linear medium. The Hamiltonian above represents 8 different processes (in which rho can be created or destryed and pions can also be created and destroyed), but only the term, c a b , is relevant. When we start from the state containing one rho particle and apply this Hamiltonian, we obtain a superposition of the initial state and the state with no rho particles and containing an entangled state of the pions
| Ψ = c 0 | ρ , 0 , 0 + c 1 d ω 1 d ω 2 d q 1 d q 2 f ( q 1 , q 2 , ω 1 , ω 2 ) | 0 , q 1 ω 1 , q 2 ω 2
subject to the condition that q 1 + q 2 = q ρ and ω 1 + ω 2 = ω ρ (which itself is part of the definition of the function f, whose exact form is not of interest to us here). The exact form of the amplitudes is also not directly relevant as only the term containing pions will contribute to interference.
The interference term, where each detector detects one positive and one negative pion, is then given by the following 8-point correlation:
ψ ( y , t ) ( ψ ) ( y , t ) ψ ( x , t ) ( ψ ) ( x , t ) ( ψ ) + ( y , t ) ψ + ( y , t ) ( ψ ) + ( x , t ) ψ + ( x , t )
where the average is taken with respect to the second term in | Ψ since, as we noted, this represents the only contribution to the detection of pions (the rest constitutes the detection of the rho meson). This expression would in quantum optics be known as the g ( 4 ) coherence [9] (where instead of the ψ operators we would have the positive and negative frequency electric field operators). This quantity is basically the probability to observe a positive and a negative pion in each detector. The reason why this will lead to interference is simple to see when the operators are expanded in the momentum basis
a p b q a r b s a n b m a k b l = a p b q a q ρ q b q ρ p a p b q a q ρ q b q ρ p + a p b q a q ρ q b q ρ p a q ρ q b q ρ p a p b q
where we have use the fact that the momentum states are correlated because of momentum conservation and the fact that all other terms must vanish since different number states are orthogonal to each other. Because of entanglement [10], namely the fact that pions populate modes whose momenta are correlated, the g 4 coherence behaves effectively the same as g 2 for bosonic number states.
The expression will reproduce the result in eq.(3). Note that we are neglecting the electromagnetic interactions between the pions. A complete treatment should, of course, include the attraction between the like pions and the repulsion otherwise, but we are here interested in the dominant effect only, which is due to the particle statistics.
The other two detection options, which is that two pions of positive charge are detected in one detector and two of negative in the other, each can be assigned a similar expression (though they only add up incoherently). In the fully entangled state of pions the interfering term has a probability 1 / 2 and each incoherent term has a probability of 1 / 4 . Here therefore the reduction in coherence is a direct consequence of the fact that in half of all cases the terms are fully distinguishable - since they contain different charges - and do not lead to interference. Given this, let us now explain why this procedure constitutes an entanglement witness.
The analysis will be much simpler if we use the qubit notation, so that a positive pion corresponds to | 0 and a negative pion to | 1 (we are then ignoring the spatial degrees of freedom as well as the bosonic nature of the pions since qubits are fully distinguishable). The state of two entangled pions is then | Ψ + = | 01 + | 10 (not normalized). The above experiment is based on detection of two such states 12 and 34 at a time. The relevant probabilities for interference are given by
p = t r { P 13 P 24 ( ρ 12 ρ 34 ) }
where P is the projection onto the symmetric state of the respective pions (labelled by the subscripts). It is clear that if the state of pions was not entangled (but, say, just a product of the states π + and π , | 01 | 01 ), the HTB interference would not occur. In fact, the entanglement witness here is similar to the one based on puruty (or linear entropy) [11]. By measuring projections onto the symmetric and antisymmetric subspaces we can calculate the total purity of the state as well as the local purities of the subsystems [12]. If the total purity exceeds both of the local ones, the total state must then be an entangled one. This is intuitively clear since for maximally entangled states the total purity is one, while the local ones are both zero (since the reduced states are equal mixtures of | 0 and | 1 ).
The qubit version of the high energy experiment is best understood by expanding the two entangled states (entangled state 12 and another one 34) in the basis of the detected qubits 13 and 24:
| Ψ 12 + | Ψ 34 + = | 00 13 | 11 13 + | 11 13 | 00 13 + | Ψ 13 + | Ψ 24 + | Ψ 13 | Ψ 24
where | Ψ = | 01 | 10 (which is a state that is antisymmetric and does not occur with pions which are bosons). It is now clear that the interference comes from the last two terms where different entangled states are themselves entangled. Entangled entanglement [13] is therefore behind the higher order coherences in quantum mechanics and femtoscopy analysed here is just one of many places where it plays a crucial role.

3. Conclusions

In this paper we have explained how a phenomenon of higher level interference, that exists in classical wave theory, can actually lead to an entanglement witness based on quantum interference. Here we would like to clarify why this is so. Since the two slit experiment contains the key aspects of both classical and quantum interference, we present its analysis in the way that captures the core idea.
Suppose for simplicity that the source is equidistant from the two (point-like) slits. Then the quantum field at the detection point can be related to the quantum field at the source in the following manner:
Ψ ( x D ) = e i k r 1 r 1 + e i k r 2 r 2 e i k s 0 s 0 Ψ ( x S ) ,
where s 0 is the distance from the source to the slits and r 1 and r 2 are the distances from the slits to D. This is clearly the same expression as the standard classical wave optics formula for interference fringes, other than the fact that Ψ is now a quantum field operator (proportional to the sum of the creation and annihilation operators, a + a ). In order to compute the interference fringes we need to relate the number operator at D to the number operator at S. Taking the dagger of the above formula and multiplying the two together we obtain
Ψ ( x D ) Ψ ( x D ) = e i k r 1 r 1 + e i k r 2 r 2 2 Ψ ( x S ) Ψ ( x S ) ,
where we have omitted the 1 / s 0 2 factor since it is just part of the overall normalisation. The restriction to the state with one photon now instructs us to reduce this expression to
| 1 D 1 D | = ( 1 + cos ( k ( r 1 r 2 ) ) 2 | 1 S 1 S | .
We have assumed that r 1 r 2 in the denominator, which we have then omitted as part of the overall normalisation. This is the first time in our calculation that we have to invoke quantum states (and we do so thinking of them as the eigenstates of the corresponding operators, so that Ψ Ψ = n = 0 n | n n | ). Taking the expected value with respect to | 1 S leads us to the (not properly normalised) probability to detect a photon at D
| 1 D | 1 D | 2 = ( 1 + cos ( k ( r 1 r 2 ) ) 2
which is the standard double slit pattern of fringes in the far-field limit and assuming that the slits are point-like. This of course is the same as in the pion interference experiments we analysed in this paper. Note also that the slit separation distance is contained in the interference fringes pattern ( ( r 1 r 2 ) ) and can be measured by this method just like the nuclear sizes are determined through femtoscopy.
It is sometimes said that entanglement leads to quantum non-locality. However, the quantum field description inherits all the local properties of classical fields. By that we mean that the elements of reality, in this case the operators pertaining to the electromagnetic field and defined at each point [14], cannot affect one another at a distance and instantaneously. There is no action at a distance. Namely, changing one operator at one point in space by actions local to that point, leaves all other operators intact [15]. Micro-causality is also satisfied (it is a weaker form of locality than the previous one), meaning that operators at space-like separated points also commute, or that any signal cannot propagate faster than the speed of light. So even though the pions are entangled, the quantum field theoretic treatment ensures that their behaviour can be described in a perfectly local (quantum) way.
This field-theoretic picture must give up the idea that particles are the elements of reality, even in the case of the experiment involving only one particle! One way of seeing that is to write the intermediate state of the photon at the two slits (labeled as 1 and 2) as an entangled state of the form | 0 1 , 1 2 + | 1 1 , 0 2 (in the Schrödinger picture). For us to talk about the photon as existing either at slit one or at slit two (but not in a superposition of both) would consitute a local hidden variable model, which we know not to be consistent with quantum physics [10,17].
The same applies to the high energy experiment we have described here. Our description, in fact, applies to any other type of a particle. We could have imagined a single electron diffraction at a crystal and the calculation would virtually be the same. The only difference is that the corresponding operators would anti-commute, which does not affect the single particle interference. Every particle in quantum field theory is an excitation of its own field and is therefore mathematically treated in an analogous way. And, needless to say, all other states of the quantized field operate the same way. (A similar view, that the fields are the ultimate entities and not the particles, has been expressed by Hobson [18]).
The double slit experiment does not contain one key ingredient relevant for pions, namely the effects of particle statistics. The interplay between spatial and internal degrees of freedom based on particle statistics is, of course, well known in quantum information in general. Protocols such as entanglement swapping [19] and entanglement distillation [20] can be performed by only exploiting the boconic (fermionic) nature of the qubits used. In this vain, the above pionic high energy experiment can be viewed as the confirmation of the spatial entanglement of pions based on the detection of their charge properties (which could be thought of as an internal degree of freedom equivalent to a qubit). One wonders if there are further insights to be gained by cross-pollination between quantum information and high energy physics.

Acknowledgments

VV is grateful to the Moore Foundation and the Templeton Foundation for supporting his research.

References

  1. R. Hanbury Brown and R. Q. Twiss, Philosophical Magazine 45, 663 (1954).
  2. Arnt Inge Vistnes and Joakim Bergli, Am. J. Phys. 90, 20 (2022).
  3. G. Goldhaber, S. Goldhaber, W.-Y. Lee, A. Pais, Phys. Rev. 120, 300 (1960).
  4. G. Baym, “The physics of Hanbury Brown–Twiss intensity interferometry: From stars to nuclear collisions,” e-print arXiv:nucl-th/9804026v2 (1998).
  5. M. A. Lisa, S. Pratt, R. Soltz, U. Wiedemann, Annual Review of Nuclear and Particle Science 55, 357 (2005).
  6. M. Born; E. Wolf, Principles of optics : electromagnetic theory of propagation, interference and diffraction of light (Oxford; New York: Pergamon Press, 1980).
  7. STAR Collaboration, Sci. Adv. 9, 3903 (2023).
  8. M. Gyulassy, S. K. Kauffmann, and L. W. Wilson, Phys. Rev. C 20, 2267 (1979).
  9. R. J. Glauber, Phys. Rev. 130, 2529 (1963).
  10. V. Vedral, Central European Journal of Physics, Vol. 1, 289 (2003).
  11. R. Horodecki and M. Horodecki, Phys. Rev. A 54, 1838 (1996).
  12. F. A. Bovino, G. Castagnoli, A. Ekert, P. Horodecki, C. Moura Alves, and A. V. Sergienko Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 240407 (2005).
  13. G. Krenn and A. Zeilinger, Phys. Rev. A 54, 1793 (1996).
  14. V. Vedral, “Local Quantum Reality", arXiv (2020).
  15. A. Tibau-Vidal, C. Marletto and V. Vedral, Phys. Rev. D 104, 065013 (2021).
  16. M. O. Terra Cunha, J. Dunningham and V. Vedral, Proc. Roy. Soc. A 463, 2277 (2007).
  17. J. Dunningham and V. Vedral, Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 180404 (2007).
  18. A. Hobson, Am. J. Phys. 81, 211 (2013).
  19. Y. Omar, N. Paunkovic, S. Bose, and V. Vedral, Phys. Rev. A 65, 062305 (2002).
  20. N. Paunkovic, Y. Omar, S. Bose, and V. Vedral, Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 (2002).
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.
Copyright: This open access article is published under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license, which permit the free download, distribution, and reuse, provided that the author and preprint are cited in any reuse.
Prerpints.org logo

Preprints.org is a free preprint server supported by MDPI in Basel, Switzerland.

Subscribe

Disclaimer

Terms of Use

Privacy Policy

Privacy Settings

© 2025 MDPI (Basel, Switzerland) unless otherwise stated