2 research outputs found
Quantum entanglement patterns in the structure of atomic nuclei within the nuclear shell model
Quantum entanglement offers a unique perspective into the underlying
structure of strongly-correlated systems such as atomic nuclei. In this paper,
we use quantum information tools to analyze the structure of light and medium
mass berillyum, oxygen, neon and calcium isotopes within the nuclear shell
model. We use different entanglement metrics, including single-orbital
entanglement, mutual information, and von Neumann entropies for different
equipartitions of the shell-model valence space and identify mode/entanglement
patterns related to the energy, angular momentum and isospin of the nuclear
single-particle orbitals. We observe that the single-orbital entanglement is
directly related to the number of valence nucleons and the energy structure of
the shell, while the mutual information highlights signatures of proton-proton
and neutron-neutron pairing. Proton and neutron orbitals are weakly entangled
by all measures, and in fact have the lowest von Neumann entropies among all
possible equipartitions of the valence space. In contrast, orbitals with
opposite angular momentum projection have relatively large entropies. This
analysis provides a guide for designing more efficient quantum algorithms for
the noisy intermediate-scale quantum era.Comment: Submitted to EPJA Topical Issue "Quantum computing in low-energy
nuclear theory
Quantum entanglement patterns in the structure of atomic nuclei within the nuclear shell model
Quantum entanglement offers a unique perspective into the underlying structure of strongly-correlated systems such as atomic nuclei. In this paper, we use quantum information tools to analyze the structure of light and medium-mass berillyum, oxygen, neon and calcium isotopes within the nuclear shell model. We use different entanglement metrics, including single-orbital entanglement, mutual information, and von Neumann entropies for different equipartitions of the shell-model valence space and identify mode-entanglement patterns related to the energy, angular momentum and isospin of the nuclear single-particle orbitals. We observe that the single-orbital entanglement is directly related to the number of valence nucleons and the energy structure of the shell, while the mutual information highlights signatures of proton-proton and neutron-neutron pairing. Proton and neutron orbitals are weakly entangled by all measures, and in fact have the lowest von Neumann entropies among all possible equipartitions of the valence space. In contrast, orbitals with opposite angular momentum projection have relatively large entropies. This analysis provides a guide for designing more efficient quantum algorithms for the noisy intermediate scale quantum era