<http://physicsweb.org/article/news/7/9/2>


šPhysicsWeb

Entanglement goes macroscopic 
3 September 2003 

Quantum entanglement is a phenomenon usually associated with the microscopic world. 
Now, however, physicists from the Universities of Chicago and Wisconsin in the US and 
University College London have seen its effects in the bulk properties of a magnetic 
material for the first time. The researchers believe that their work has implications 
both for understanding quantum magnetism and in building quantum computers - where 
entanglement is the key to the increased power of such devices (S Ghosh et al. 2003 
2003 Nature 425 48). 

Entanglement is a feature of quantum mechanics that allows particles with two distinct 
quantum states to share a much closer relationship than classical physics allows. If 
two particles are entangled, then we can know the state of one particle by measuring 
the state of the other. For example, if one particle has a spin 'up' then the other 
automatically has a spin 'down'. Entanglement is crucial for quantum computing and 
teleportation but its effects are not generally seen beyond the scale of subatomic 
particles. 


Figure 1 

Thomas Rosenbaum at the University of Chicago and colleagues performed their 
experiment on a single crystal of a simple magnetic salt that contains lithium, 
holmium, yttrium and fluorine (figure 1). The holmium atoms in this salt all behave 
like tiny magnets and, in the absence of a magnetic field, their magnetic moments 
point in random directions. When a field is applied, however, the moments align up 
with the direction of the field (figure 2). 


Figure 2 

The researchers measured the ease with which the magnetic moments aligned with the 
field at different temperatures. They then compared this 'susceptibility' to the 
material's ability to absorb heat and found that the two properties were very 
different. 

The susceptibility increases smoothly as the sample cooled while the heat absorption 
varies in a more irregular way. This is in contrast to ordinary materials and, 
according to the researchers, can only be explained if there is quantum mechanical 
mixing - or entanglement - of the different magnetic states in the system. This is 
because entanglement effects contribute much more strongly to the susceptibility than 
to the heat absorption. 

To confirm their findings the researchers combined their experimental results with 
computer simulations and theory. The salt's susceptibility was found to match 
theoretical values that had taken quantum entanglement into account. 

The researchers say that their work shows that entanglement can occur in a disordered 
solid that is far from perfect. "We see these dense, solid state magnets as promising 
systems for both fundamental quantum mechanics and potential quantum computing 
applications," Rosenbaum told PhysicsWeb . "The challenge remains to manipulate the 
entanglement to perform actual quantum logic operations." 

The group now plans to investigate whether it can see similar effects at higher 
temperatures because it obtained its data at temperatures near absolute zero. 


-- 
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R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

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