What the study found: Under the Hawking effect in Schwarzschild spacetime, increasing the excitation number q reduces quantum entanglement and mutual information, while enhancing quantum coherence.
Why the authors say this matters: The authors suggest that, in gravitational settings, lower q is favorable for maintaining entanglement, while higher q may be useful for tasks that depend on quantum coherence in relativistic quantum information processing.
What the researchers tested: The study examined arbitrary q-th excited states, rather than only the vacuum state |0⟩ and first excited state |1⟩, in multipartite quantum systems. It analyzed how the Hawking effect influences quantum entanglement and coherence in Schwarzschild spacetime.
What worked and what didn't: The results show that increasing q weakens quantum correlations as measured by entanglement and mutual information. At the same time, higher q strengthens quantum coherence, so the two resources respond in opposite ways.
What to keep in mind: The abstract does not describe detailed limitations or broader scope constraints beyond the focus on multipartite states in Schwarzschild spacetime.
Key points
- Increasing the excitation number q reduces quantum entanglement under the Hawking effect.
- Increasing q also reduces mutual information, a measure of shared information between parts of a system.
- Higher q enhances quantum coherence in the studied multipartite states.
- The authors suggest lower q helps preserve entanglement in gravitational settings.
- The study focuses on arbitrary q-th excited states in Schwarzschild spacetime.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Higher excitation reduces entanglement but preserves coherence
- Authors:
- Shu-Min Wu, Xiao-Wei Teng, Hui-Chen Yang, Rui-Yang Xu, Pedro Barros, H. A. S. Costa
- Institutions:
- Liaoning Normal University, Universidade Federal do Piauí
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-22
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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