42,808 research outputs found

    Entanglement and Bell's inequality violation above room temperature in metal carboxylates

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    In the present work we show that a special family of materials, the metal carboxylates, may have entangled states up to very high temperatures. From magnetic susceptibility measurements, we have estimated the critical temperature below which entanglement exists in the cooper carboxylate \{Cu2_2(O2_2CH)4_4\}\{Cu(O2_2CH)2_2(2-methylpyridine)2_2\}, and we have found this to be above room temperature (Te∼630T_e \sim 630 K). Furthermore, the results show that the system remains maximally entangled until close to ∼100\sim 100 K and the Bell's inequality is violated up to nearly room temperature (∼290\sim 290 K)

    Experimental Determination of Thermal Entanglement in Spin Clusters using Magnetic Susceptibility Measurements

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    The present work reports an experimental observation of thermal entanglement in a clusterized spin chain formed in the compound Na2_2Cu5_5Si4_4O14_{14}. The presence of entanglement was investigated through two measured quantities, an Entanglement Witness and the Entanglement of Formation, both derived from the magnetic susceptibility. It was found that pairwise entanglement exists below ∼200 \sim 200 K. Tripartite entanglement was also observed below ∼240 \sim 240 K. A theoretical study of entanglement evolution as a function of applied field and temperature is also presented.Comment: Submited to Phys. Rev.

    Irreversible Opinion Spreading on Scale-Free Networks

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    We study the dynamical and critical behavior of a model for irreversible opinion spreading on Barab\'asi-Albert (BA) scale-free networks by performing extensive Monte Carlo simulations. The opinion spreading within an inhomogeneous society is investigated by means of the magnetic Eden model, a nonequilibrium kinetic model for the growth of binary mixtures in contact with a thermal bath. The deposition dynamics, which is studied as a function of the degree of the occupied sites, shows evidence for the leading role played by hubs in the growth process. Systems of finite size grow either ordered or disordered, depending on the temperature. By means of standard finite-size scaling procedures, the effective order-disorder phase transitions are found to persist in the thermodynamic limit. This critical behavior, however, is absent in related equilibrium spin systems such as the Ising model on BA scale-free networks, which in the thermodynamic limit only displays a ferromagnetic phase. The dependence of these results on the degree exponent is also discussed for the case of uncorrelated scale-free networks.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures; added results and discussion on uncorrelated scale-free networks; added references. To appear in PR

    Geometric classical and total correlations via trace distance

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    We introduce the concepts of geometric classical and total correlations through Schatten 1-norm (trace norm), which is the only Schatten p-norm able to ensure a well-defined geometric measure of correlations. In particular, we derive the analytical expressions for the case of two-qubit Bell-diagonal states, discussing the superadditivity of geometric correlations. As an illustration, we compare our results with the entropic correlations, discussing both their hierarchy and monotonicity properties. Moreover, we apply the geometric correlations to investigate the ground state of spin chains in the thermodynamic limit. In contrast to the entropic quantifiers, we show that the classical correlation is the only source of 1-norm geometric correlation that is able to signaling an infinite-order quantum phase transition.Comment: v2: published versio
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