Switching global correlations on and off in a many-body quantum state by tuning local entanglement
Abstract
A quantum many-body state built on a classical 1D Ising model with locally entangled qubits is considered. This setup can model an infinite-player quantum Prisoner's dilemma game with each site representing two entangled players (or qubits). The local entanglement γ between two qubits placed on a site in the 1D Ising model and classical coupling between adjacent sites of the Ising model has an apposite influence on qubits. It points to a counter-intuitive situation wherein local entanglement at a site can exactly cancel global correlations, signaling an artificial quantum many-body state wherein, by locally tuning the entanglement at a particular site, one can transition from a strongly correlated quantum state to an uncorrelated quantum state and then to a correlated classical state. In other words, we can simulate a state similar to a Type II superconducting state via local tuning of entanglement in a 1D Ising chain with entangled qubits.
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