Many-particle entanglement is a fundamental concept of quantum physics that
still presents conceptual challenges. While spin-squeezed and other
nonclassical states of atomic ensembles were used to enhance measurement
precision in quantum metrology, the notion of entanglement in these systems
remained controversial because the correlations between the indistinguishable
atoms were witnessed by collective measurements only. Here we use
highresolution imaging to directly measure the spin correlations between
spatially separated parts of a spin-squeezed Bose-Einstein condensate. We
observe entanglement that is strong enough for Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen
steering: we can predict measurement outcomes for non-commuting observables in
one spatial region based on a corresponding measurement in another region with
an inferred uncertainty product below the Heisenberg relation. This could be
exploited for entanglement-enhanced imaging of electromagnetic field
distributions and quantum information tasks beyond metrology