Skip to main content
Scientific Reports logoLink to Scientific Reports
. 2017 Mar 23;7:44675. doi: 10.1038/srep44675

Universality of Schmidt decomposition and particle identity

Stefania Sciara 1,2, Rosario Lo Franco 2,3,a, Giuseppe Compagno 2
PMCID: PMC5363071  PMID: 28333163

Abstract

Schmidt decomposition is a widely employed tool of quantum theory which plays a key role for distinguishable particles in scenarios such as entanglement characterization, theory of measurement and state purification. Yet, its formulation for identical particles remains controversial, jeopardizing its application to analyze general many-body quantum systems. Here we prove, using a newly developed approach, a universal Schmidt decomposition which allows faithful quantification of the physical entanglement due to the identity of particles. We find that it is affected by single-particle measurement localization and state overlap. We study paradigmatic two-particle systems where identical qubits and qutrits are located in the same place or in separated places. For the case of two qutrits in the same place, we show that their entanglement behavior, whose physical interpretation is given, differs from that obtained before by different methods. Our results are generalizable to multiparticle systems and open the way for further developments in quantum information processing exploiting particle identity as a resource.


Systems of identical particles constitute the basic building blocks of quantum information theory, being present in Bose-Einstein condensates1,2, quantum dots3,4,5,6, superconducting circuits7 and optical setups8,9. Completely characterizing the quantum features of these composite systems is thus a crucial requirement from both fundamental and technological viewpoint. Investigation of bipartite entanglement for identical particles started some time ago10,11,12,13,14,15 but, differently from the case of distinguishable particles, the subject has remained controversial10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27. The controversy mainly arises from the way identical particles are ordinarily treated in quantum mechanics by the standard particle-based approach, that is by making them artificially distinguishable with the attribution of nonobservable labels27,28. This practice has the consequence that the structure of the states inevitably is, with respect to labels, that of an entangled state. As a consequence, some viewpoints has been advanced12,14,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25 differing both in interpretation and, in some cases, in the quantification of the part of entanglement attributable to particle identity. The last aspect can hardly be considered devoid of importance in view of entanglement being in general a resource for quantum information and communication12,14,18,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37. Differences among the viewpoints clearly emerge in the simple paradigmatic case of identical particles independently prepared in far regions, such that they are expected not to have any correlations, and then allowed to merge spatially without any other change. In one viewpoint, as epitomized in a textbook27, the entanglement due to indistinguishability is present for far particles but nevertheless is physically no matter of concern because it cannot be exploited. In a widely held second viewpoint18,26, this entanglement is a merely formal artifact even when the particles are brought to overlap. In order to characterize it in the latter situation, a third viewpoint has been proposed which resorts to extraction procedures17. The consequent conclusions may be however subject to criticism on the ground that the extracted entanglement does not represent the one in the overlapping condition being instead produced by the extraction operation itself.

Among tools which are at the heart of quantum information and quantum computation, there is the Schmidt decomposition (SD) for bipartite systems of multilevel particles in pure states. It is of general application to entanglement characterization, theory of measurement, state purification, quantum erasure29,30 and also in black-hole physics38,39. Despite its wide utilization in systems of distinguishable particles, even the SD remains debated for identical particles10,16,26 where it is replaced by Slater decomposition. The associated Slater rank witnesses entanglement but its interpretation is different for bosons or fermions26. For distinguishable particles, the SD unveils the entanglement of the system by the von Neumann entropy of the reduced density matrix, whose eigenvalues are the squares of the Schmidt coefficients appearing in the decomposition30. Instead “the relationship between Schmidt coefficients and the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix breaks down in the case of identical particles”26. Therefore, the ordinary notion of partial trace to get the reduced state has not been considered suitable for assessing the entanglement of identical particles16,18,26. Attempts to provide a SD for indistinguishable particles give wrong results, as nonzero entropy and thus the presence of entanglement for uncorrelated fermions10.

Using a recent non-standard particle-based approach40, here we develop a SD valid for both bosons and fermions, which allows the direct characterization of the physical entanglement of the particles. Differently from previous viewpoints, application of this method to the paradigmatic example exposed above allows, without resorting to extraction, to demonstrate that entanglement is zero for separated particles and nonzero when they overlap. Moreover, our SD overcomes the problems occurring in other proposals of SD within the second quantization10, being the Schmidt coefficients always the square roots of the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix, exactly as for distinguishable particles. This SD gives the novel tool to straightforwardly characterize the entanglement for identical particles.

Results

Theory

We recall the notation of the intrinsically symmetric particle-based approach introduced in ref. 40. Hereafter, we mean by “symmetric states” (or “symmetric Hilbert space”) the symmetric or antisymmetric behavior of the system states depending on the bosonic or fermionic nature of the particles, respectively. The overall state of two identical particles, one in the state ϕ and one in ψ, is completely characterized by enumerating the one-particle states and represented as |ϕ, ψ〉. Two particles in |ϕ, ψ〉 are not independent and their overall state is a whole which cannot be written as a tensorial product of one-particle states, i.e. Inline graphic. However, a nonseparable external symmetric product of one-particle states (wedge product) can be introduced as Inline graphic. Analogously, we have Inline graphic (this wedge product will be crucial in demonstrating the theorem below). The probability amplitude of finding the two particles in Inline graphic if they are in |ϕ, ψ〉, is obtained by the symmetric two-particle scalar product defined in terms of one-particle amplitudes as40

graphic file with name srep44675-m5.jpg

where η is +1 for bosons and −1 for fermions. This probability amplitude immediately shows that the generic state |ϕ, ψ〉 is symmetric, i.e. Inline graphic. The state |ϕ, ψ〉 spans a linear symmetric two-particle Hilbert space Inline graphic. A symmetric inner product between state spaces of different dimensionality (one-particle projective measurement) can also be introduced as40

graphic file with name srep44675-m8.jpg

In Inline graphic it is possible to choose an orthonormal two-particle basis Inline graphic, |i〉 and |j〉 being single-particle states, where an arbitrary state of two identical particles can be expressed as Inline graphic. By Eq. (2), one then gets the reduced (single-particle) density matrix via partial trace as40 Inline graphic, where Inline graphic. We emphasize that now partial trace depends on the single-particle basis being local or nonlocal, as we shall show in the following. This behavior differs from the case of distinguishable particles where, since a single-particle basis always addresses a given particle, the partial trace is not affected by the local or nonlocal nature of the basis. We can now give the following theorem.

Theorem 1

Within a symmetric two-particle Hilbert space Inline graphic, a pure state of two d-level identical particles |Ψ〉 can always be written in the Schmidt decomposition (SD)

graphic file with name srep44675-m15.jpg

The “Schmidt coefficients” Inline graphic are the square roots of the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix and the states Inline graphic its eigenstates. The state Inline graphic belongs to the basis Inline graphic and the symmetric two-particle basis Inline graphic is the “Schmidt basis”.

Proof. We express the state |Ψ〉 in terms of the symmetric two-particle basis Inline graphic as Inline graphic, where the symmetric two-particle identity matrix Inline graphic has been inserted. By defining Inline graphic, the state can be further cast as Inline graphic. Generally, the states Inline graphic are not orthonormal. Nevertheless, as for distinguishable particles29, there exists a basis Inline graphic where they are orthogonal, i.e. Inline graphic. We thus write

graphic file with name srep44675-m29.jpg

where we have used the partial trace Inline graphic. When the states Inline graphic are the eigenstates of Inline graphic, i.e. Inline graphic, the states Inline graphic are orthogonal and satisfy Inline graphic. Denoting by Inline graphic the set of orthonormal states associated to Inline graphic, we have

graphic file with name srep44675-m38.jpg

Both Inline graphic and Inline graphic are eigenstates of ρ(1) with the same eigenvalue λi (as proven in Methods). Thus, given a set of eigenstates Inline graphic, each Inline graphic is one of the states within the set. For bosons, if the eigenvalues are nondegenerate then Inline graphic; for fermions, Pauli exclusion principle dictates Inline graphic and the eigenvalues are always degenerate. Substituting Inline graphic of Eq. (5) in Inline graphic, the SD of Eq. (3) is finally demonstrated. ◽

When the states are characterized by more than one observable, for instance when the single-particle basis is Inline graphic (|a〉 and |b〉 being two independent observables), one can be interested in studying the system for a fixed value of one of the observables. In such cases, the theorem above needs to be specialized. Let us take a two-particle state of the form Inline graphic, where u, v are arbitrary single-particle states. This means that the SD of Inline graphic is obtained by following the theorem above with the difference that the partial trace is now performed on the subspace of b (a) with the observable a (b) fixed. The corresponding reduced density matrix is indicated as Inline graphic (see Methods). The universality of SD just proven entails its application to identical particles in many scenarios of quantum information (entanglement characterization, purification, measurement theory) in analogy with distinguishable particles30. Knowledge of the Schmidt basis is essential to find the suitable set of measurements (Schmidt observables41) to acquire information on correlated identical particles in experimental contexts42,43,44.

The SD of Eq. (3) defines an entangled state in terms of nonseparability, whatever the overlap between the particles. As for distinguishable particles29, we define the positive integer “Schmidt number” s as the number of terms appearing in Eq. (3), that is the number of nonzero eigenvalues of Inline graphic. If s = 1, Inline graphic is pure and identifies a nonentangled state; if s >1, Inline graphic testifies an entangled state. The Schmidt number thus acts as entanglement witness. Analogous considerations hold for Inline graphic. In particular, the (symmetric) basis state Inline graphic with single-particle states |i〉, |j〉 containing only one observable results to be unentangled when Inline graphic, while it is maximally entangled when Inline graphic (see Methods). Being the Schmidt coefficients Inline graphic the square roots of the eigenvalues of the single-particle reduced state, they immediately lead to the von Neumann entropy

graphic file with name srep44675-m59.jpg

as a quantifier of entanglement for identical particles, exactly as happens for nonidentical particles29. Given any pure state Inline graphic, its SD is obtained in a recipe format as follows:

  1. perform the trace of ρ on a chosen single-particle basis to get the reduced single-particle density matrix Inline graphic (or Inline graphic);

  2. calculate eigenvalues, λi, and eigenstates, Inline graphic, of Inline graphic (Inline graphic);

  3. construct the states Inline graphic and express the state Inline graphic in terms of the Schmidt basis Inline graphic.

Applications

In the following, we apply this recipe to some states of interest (see Fig. 1). The first one is a situation already known40 which is here particularly useful to present how our method works. The other ones are new examples which evidence the usefulness of SD in finding novel entanglement features of identical particles.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

(a) Two identical qubits in two spatially separated places with opposite pseudospins. (b) Two identical qubits in the same spatial mode with arbitrary pseudospins. (c) Two identical qutrits (three-level quantum systems) in the same spatial mode. The shaded ellipses indicate that the particles are entangled.

Two qubits in two separated sites (Bell-like state).

 We consider two identical particles (bosons or fermions) with orthogonal internal degrees of freedom (pseudospins) located in separated sites, described by

graphic file with name srep44675-m69.jpg

where Inline graphic (Inline graphic real, Inline graphic with θ being the relative phase). The site M (Left (L) or Right (R)) and the pseudospin σ (↑, ↓) are independent observables. The two sites are nonoverlapping, behaving thus as “physical” labels. The state of Eq. (7) recalls Bell-like states26,45. It permits us to discuss the role of local and nonlocal measurement in the structure of the SD for identical particle states. When a single-particle property (e.g., the pseudospin) is measured in a localized region of space (e.g., L), the measurements itself and the corresponding partial trace are local40. According to the recipe above, this measurement corresponds to project Inline graphic on the local basis, i.e. on the subspace Inline graphic. The reduced single-particle density matrix is

graphic file with name srep44675-m75.jpg

It has eigenvalues Inline graphic, Inline graphic, and eigenstates Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, which define the Schmidt basis. We notice that Inline graphic and that the particle statistics is intrinsically included by the presence of Inline graphic. The SD of Inline graphic is

graphic file with name srep44675-m85.jpg

with von Neumann entropy

graphic file with name srep44675-m86.jpg

This result coincides with the known von Neumann entropy for two distinguishable particles in a Bell-like state, giving maximal entanglement Inline graphic for a Bell state (Inline graphic)31.

When nonlocal (one-particle) measurements are performed simultaneously on both sites (L and R) where the particle has nonzero probability of being found, the trace is nonlocal. Operationally, it corresponds to perform the partial trace of ρ on the global single-particle basis, i.e. on Inline graphic. Following the recipe above by a global partial trace, we get a SD of the Bell-like state Inline graphic different from Eq. (9) (see Methods) leading to

graphic file with name srep44675-m91.jpg

The difference between Inline graphic and Inline graphic highlights the importance of measurement localization on the structure of the SD and in turn on the entanglement between two identical particles located in different sites. To further clarify this aspect, we consider the particular case α = 1 when the state Inline graphic becomes Inline graphic, which is unentangled40 since the particles are in separated sites and behave as uncorrelated distinguishable particles31. For this state, Inline graphic and Inline graphic. For systems of identical particles, local single-particle measurements supply the intrinsic entanglement40, whilst nonlocal measurements yield “measurement-induced entanglement”26,46. This feature must be contrasted with what happens for distinguishable particles, where single-particle measurements always address individual particles. We point out that these results overcome the issue existing with previous proposals of Schmidt decomposition and entanglement measure for identical particles which give nonzero entanglement for uncorrelated separated particles10,11.

Two qubits in the same site with arbitrary pseudospins

Entanglement is a measure of nonseparability of the state47. When the particles are in the same site, their internal states (pseudospins) establish such nonseparability. A recent experiment showed that the entanglement in a Cooper pair can be extracted by means of graphene quantum dots, so that it can be possibly used as a resource for quantum information in the solid state4. Moreover, it was recently observed48 that it is possible to prepare two maximally entangled ultra-cold atoms with opposite spin states by bringing them into the same optical tweezer (site). In general, one physically expects that situations may occur where particles are in the same site M with pseudospins in arbitrary directions. Such a condition is possible only for bosons, since for fermions the only allowed state by the Pauli exclusion principle is that with opposite pseudospins which is maximally entangled40. We hence study two identical boson qubits (e.g., photons) with one pseudospin along z-direction (Inline graphic) and the other one along the direction Inline graphic, as displayed in Fig. 2 (this situation generalizes that of two bosons with opposite pseudospins treated previously40). By exploiting linearity and omitting the spatial index M, this state has the (unnormalized) form

Figure 2.

Figure 2

The two-qubit state is expressed by Inline graphic Inline graphic. One spin (red arrow) is along Inline graphic-direction and the other (blue arrow) in the direction determined by the angles Inline graphic and Inline graphic.

graphic file with name srep44675-m100.jpg

where Inline graphic. Following the recipe above by performing the partial trace on the basis Inline graphic (see Methods), we obtain its (normalized) SD

graphic file with name srep44675-m103.jpg

where Inline graphic, Inline graphic and Inline graphic. Notice the dependence of SD on θ, which represents the pseudospin state overlap of the two particles. Entanglement of the two boson qubits is quantified by the von Neumann entropy Inline graphic and plotted in Fig. 3. It is maximum for θ = π (opposite pseudospins) and zero for θ = 0 (same pseudospins).

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Entanglement quantified by the von Neumann entropy of the state Inline graphic, Inline graphic is plotted as a function of θ.

Two indentical qubits in the same site can thus be physically entangled40, a result which is indirectly confirmed by extraction procedures17 and is instead uncaught by other entanglement measures for identical particles, like the detection-level concurrence26.

Two identical qutrits in the same site

Systems of three-level particles (also called qutrits) are promising alternative candidates to be used in quantum processors instead of the standard two-level qubits49,50. We apply our method to two identical qutrits in the same site, each characterized by the basis Inline graphic (the spatial index is omitted for simplicity). Specifically we take this system, which is equivalent to that of two spin-1 bosons, in the previously analyzed state16.

graphic file with name srep44675-m109.jpg

By the partial trace on the above one-particle basis, we obtain the following reduced density matrix

graphic file with name srep44675-m110.jpg

from which one can calculate the eigenvalues and eigenvectors required for constructing the SD. Since their explicit expressions are cumbersome, we focus on a simple particular case which allows us to make the comparison to another method16 that provides different entanglement predictions for this state. In particular, we choose Inline graphic in the state of Eq. (14), which thus reduces to

graphic file with name srep44675-m112.jpg

By following the usual recipe (see Methods), we get its SD

graphic file with name srep44675-m113.jpg

where Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic. Expressing Inline graphic in the single-particle basis Inline graphic (i = 1, 2, 3) and exploiting the linearity of the symmetric Hilbert space40, we get Inline graphic. The von Neumann entropy of Eq. (6) is Inline graphic, which represents a maximally entangled state independently of ϕ. We provide a physical motivation to support this result. We notice that Inline graphic, where Inline graphic. The independence of ϕ is due to the fact that the amount of entanglement only rests on the scalar product and hence on the angle between the single-particle states Inline graphic, Inline graphic, as depicted in Fig. 4. Moreover, entanglement is maximum because Inline graphic, Inline graphic are orthogonal (as mentioned in Theory section and demonstrated in the Methods). This situation is analogous to the case of two identical qubits in the same site with pseudospin states in arbitrary directions Inline graphic treated before. Our result (ϕ-independent) contrasts with the previous one (ϕ-dependent)16.

Figure 4.

Figure 4

The two-qutrit state is expressed by Inline graphic, where Inline graphic. The single-particle states Inline graphic and Inline graphic are orthogonal.

Discussion

We observe that a difference exists from an operational viewpoint between nonidentical and identical particles. For distinguishable particles, SD and its corresponding entanglement are known to be exploitable within a resource theory by local operations, addressing each individual particle, and classical communication (LOCC)29,30. Differently, indistinguishable particles are not individually addressable. Nevertheless, the SD here presented for identical particles identifies an entanglement still exploitable by LOCC, which then allows quantum information protocols like teleportation. As an instance, this can be achieved by resorting to extraction procedures which make the overlapping identical particles tunnel with certain probabilities into two separated spatial modes17. For particles in the same site, where an intrinsic entanglement can be defined40, it is straightforward to realize that the original Schmidt decomposition is reproduced, in a conditional fashion, into the two-particle state of the two accessible separated modes. The operational aspects will be treated elsewhere in detail, including the case of partially overlapping identical particles where the definition of entanglement is more subtle40.

Summarizing, we have supplied, within a non-standard approach to identical particles40, a universal SD of bipartite quantum systems, holding for particles of any nature. This result shows that the problems arising with other attempts of SD for identical particles within the second quantization, which are solved here in a natural way, are not therefore to be settled by arguments related to quantum information coding and processing10. In our approach the Schmidt number maintains its role of entanglement witness and the Schmidt coefficients can be faithfully used to calculate the von Neumann entropy. These aspects permit, differently from what has been claimed12,26,31, unambiguous quantification of entanglement for indistinguishable particles by ordinary notions, like the von Neumann entropy after partial trace.

We have first tested the reliability of the SD by using it to study the well-known condition of two identical qubits with opposite pseudospins in spatially separated sites. The SD and the corresponding entanglement entropy give the physically expected results, as zero entanglement for a product state and maximal entanglement for a Bell state, also showing that nonlocal measurements induce entanglement in the system. We have then applied the SD to analyze two boson qubits in the same site, finding how the amount of their entanglement depends on their pseudospin overlap: the entanglement increases as the two internal states tend to be orthogonal. This behavior generalizes previous results limited to orthogonal pseudospins40, which appear to confirm recent experimental observations of entanglement extraction in Cooper pairs4 and of entanglement generation between two cold atoms in the same optical tweezer48. We have finally studied a system of two identical qutrits, which are relevant for storing quantum information49,50. We have straightforwardly obtained their entanglement and provided a physical interpretation in the case when they are in the same site. Our result differs from that determined for the same system by an alternative approach16. The origin of this difference in the entanglement measurement remains to be understood, requiring experimental verification and comparison of both theoretical approaches.

Our result allows the natural generalization of the SD to arbitrary bipartitions of systems of Inline graphic identical particles. Our work enables the exploitation of this tool for characterizing composite quantum systems in theoretical and experimental relevant conditions where identical particles live in partially overlapping sites (e.g., electrons in quantum dots3,4,5,6, Bose-Einstein condensates1, solid-state qubits in circuit quantum electrodynamics7 and wave-guided and integrated photons8,9), which remain little explored. Our research demonstrates that, differently from what stated before, two identical particles prepared independently in spatially separated sites are not entangled and that, when these particles are brought to overlap with no other change, there is a physical entanglement which is to be attributed to quantum indistinguishability. This fact settles the ambiguity on the interpretation of identical particle entanglement and establishes that entanglement between identical particles is not a mere mathematical artefact, as has been argued26,18. As a further novel aspect, our approach evidences how the local and nonlocal nature of single-particle measurements, which define the partial trace operation, and the single-particle state overlap influence the structure of the SD and therefore the quantification of the entanglement. The Schmidt decomposition for identical particles here reported supply methods to exploit the resources of entanglement coming from particle identity for applications such as state teleportation, quantum metrology and quantum cryptography.

Methods

Eigenstates Inline graphic of the reduced density matrix

Here we demonstrate that the states Inline graphic are eigenstates of Inline graphic with eigenvalues Inline graphic, analogously to the eigenstates Inline graphic. We start by using Eq. (5) of the manuscript and reminding that Inline graphic to have

graphic file with name srep44675-m136.jpg

Since Inline graphic and Inline graphic, we obtain

graphic file with name srep44675-m139.jpg

At this point, inserting the two-particle identity matrix Inline graphic between Inline graphic and Inline graphic and using Eq. (2) of the main text to get Inline graphic, we find

graphic file with name srep44675-m144.jpg

where the last equality is due to Eq. (5) of the manuscript and to the symmetry property Inline graphic (Inline graphic). Hence, we conclude that

graphic file with name srep44675-m147.jpg

that is what we intended to demonstrate. Notice that the states Inline graphic belong to the basis Inline graphic of the eigenstates of the reduced density matrix.

Relationship between the eigenstates Inline graphic and Inline graphic

According to Eq. (5) of the manuscript, one has

graphic file with name srep44675-m152.jpg

Expressing Inline graphic by the SD of Eq. (3) of the main text, we obtain

graphic file with name srep44675-m154.jpg

where we have used Inline graphic (see Equation (1) of the manuscript) and Inline graphic.

From the previous equation, it is immediately seen that for fermions, as expected, it is always Inline graphic, since two of them cannot occupy the same state (Pauli exclusion principle). The orthogonality of the eigenstates Inline graphic and Inline graphic implies that the eigenvalues Inline graphic of the reduced density matrix for a state of two fermions must be degenerate. For states of two bosons, instead, both cases of degenerate and non-degenerate eigenvalues can occur. In particular, if the eigenvalues Inline graphic of the reduced density matrix are non-degenerate, it immediately follows Inline graphic: the eigenstates Inline graphic and Inline graphic coincide. We stress that these properties are always true when the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix are calculated within the complete single-particle basis (including all possible outcomes of the observables which define a single-particle state) or in the specific case when the single-particle state is described by an observable alone, which are the conditions assumed in proving the theorem of the manuscript. Wider scenarios arise when the reduced density matrix is instead calculated by fixing a given value of an observable.

Partial trace on a given subspace of an observable

Let us consider a single-particle state Inline graphic and a two-particle state Inline graphic, where Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic are arbitrary states corresponding to two independent observables Inline graphic and Inline graphic (e.g., the site and the spin of the particle). We show a general criterion to perform the partial trace of Inline graphic on the subspace of an observable (e.g., Inline graphic) by varying the other one (e.g., Inline graphic). We first calculate the one-particle projective measurement (see Equation (2) of the manuscript)

graphic file with name srep44675-m178.jpg

The action of Inline graphic on the state Inline graphic can be thus defined as

graphic file with name srep44675-m181.jpg

The reduced single-particle density matrix performed on the subspace Inline graphic of the observable Inline graphic (that is, obtained by fixing Inline graphic and summing on Inline graphic) reads

graphic file with name srep44675-m186.jpg

Once the reduced density matrix is so obtained and normalized, the entanglement can be quantified by von Neumann entropy, as usual.

Entanglement of a two-particle basis state Inline graphic

Here we calculate the entanglement of a basis state Inline graphic within the complete single-particle basis, showing that it depends on the scalar product between Inline graphic, Inline graphic. We thus consider the two-identical particle state Inline graphic, where Inline graphic and Inline graphic are generic single-particle states. The reduced single-particle density matrix, performed on the basis Inline graphic, reads

graphic file with name srep44675-m195.jpg

By using Eq. (2) of the manuscript, we obtain

graphic file with name srep44675-m196.jpg

Recognizing the presence of the single-particle identity Inline graphic, the reduced density matrix Inline graphic reduces to

graphic file with name srep44675-m199.jpg

If Inline graphic and Inline graphic are orthogonal, i.e. Inline graphic, one obtains

graphic file with name srep44675-m203.jpg

Since the eigenvalues of Inline graphic are Inline graphic, entanglement as quantified by the von Neumann entropy is maximum (see Equation (6) of the main text). Moreover, the presence of entanglement (independently of its amount) is witnessed by the number of the nonvanishing eigenvalues, that is by the Schmidt number.

On the other side, when the states Inline graphic, Inline graphic coincide, that is Inline graphic, one obtains

graphic file with name srep44675-m209.jpg

Such a condition, allowed only for bosons (Inline graphic), leads to Inline graphic which is a pure state whose unique nonvanishing eigenvalue is Inline graphic. Entanglement of this state is thus zero (the von Neumann entropy vanishes), as already witnessed by the presence of only one nonvanishing eigenvalue in the reduced density matrix.

We then conclude that the entanglement of a two-particle basis state Inline graphic depends on the scalar product (and thus on the angle, from a geometrical viewpoint) between the single-particle states Inline graphic and Inline graphic. It is maximum when they are orthogonal and zero when they are the same. Furthermore, we have here confirmed that the Schmidt number is an entanglement witness, as for distinguishable particles29. We remark that these results are valid when the partial trace is performed within the complete single-particle basis in the specific case when the single-particle state is described by an observable alone. We have already seen (see section above and the case of two spatially separated particles of the manuscript) that for a single-particle state described by a number of observables, new scenarios surface for determining the entanglement of the identical particle system.

Schmidt decomposition of the Bell-like state by a global partial trace

We give here the Schmidt decomposition of the Bell-like state Inline graphic of Eq. (7) of the manuscript, by following the recipe in the main text. We first perform the global partial trace of Inline graphic on the total single-particle space Inline graphic, and obtain

graphic file with name srep44675-m219.jpg

It has eigenvalues Inline graphic, Inline graphic, and eigenstates Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, which define the Schmidt basis. The Schmidt decomposition of the Bell-like state thus results

graphic file with name srep44675-m226.jpg

and it permits to write the von Neumann entropy Inline graphic of Eq. (11) of the manuscript. Notice the difference between the SD given here and that reported in Eq. (9) of the main text.

Schmidt decomposition of the two-boson state |Φ〉

We here provide the Schmidt decomposition of the two-boson state Inline graphic defined in Eq. (12) of the manuscript. The reduced density matrix Inline graphic, obtained by performing the partial trace of Inline graphic on the basis Inline graphic, is

graphic file with name srep44675-m232.jpg

where Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic and Inline graphic. It is straightforward to find its eigenvalues

graphic file with name srep44675-m237.jpg

and the corresponding eigenstates

graphic file with name srep44675-m238.jpg

As we see, they only depend on the angle between the pseudospins (Inline graphic). Since we are dealing with two bosons in the same site, whose single-particle states are described by only an observable (the pseudospin), and the eigenvalues are nondegenerate, the single-particle states Inline graphic, Inline graphic defining the Schmidt basis Inline graphic are Inline graphic and Inline graphic. Therefore, the (normalized) Schmidt decomposition of the state Inline graphic, obtained by Eq. (3) of the manuscript, is given by

graphic file with name srep44675-m246.jpg

The corresponding entanglement is quantified by the von Neumann entropy Inline graphic.

Schmidt decomposition of the state |Ψ ϕ 〉 of two qutrits in the same site

We give the Schmidt decomposition of two identical qutrits in the same site, each characterized by the basis Inline graphic. This system is equivalent to that of two spin-1 bosons in the same hole, previously analyzed by an alternative method16. We consider the state

graphic file with name srep44675-m249.jpg

where the spatial index has been omitted for simplicity. By performing the partial trace of ρ onto the basis Inline graphic, we obtain the reduced density matrix

graphic file with name srep44675-m251.jpg

which has eigenvalues Inline graphic, Inline graphic and eigenstates Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, Inline graphic, which define the Schmidt basis. From Eq. (3) of the main text, the SD of the state is

graphic file with name srep44675-m258.jpg

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Sciara, S. et al. Universality of Schmidt decomposition and particle identity. Sci. Rep. 7, 44675; doi: 10.1038/srep44675 (2017).

Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Acknowledgments

R.L.F. and G.C. acknowledge Università degli Studi di Palermo for financial support of this publication (voce di bilancio CA.C.B. 02.03.03. del 30/06/2015). The authors would like to thank Reinhard F. Werner for a comment on the operational role of identical particle entanglement as a resource in occasion of a conference.

Footnotes

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Author Contributions S.S. performed the calculations. R.L.F. and G.C. devised the theoretical framework and supervised the work. All the authors discussed the results and contributed to the preparation of the manuscript.

References

  1. Bloch I., Dalibard J. & Zwerger W. Many-body physics with ultracold gases. Rev. Mod. Phys. 80, 885–964 (2008). [Google Scholar]
  2. Anderlini M. et al. Controlled exchange interaction between pairs of neutral atoms in an optical lattice. Nature 448, 452–456 (2007). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  3. Kolodrubetz M. H. & Petta J. R. Coherent holes in a semiconductor quantum dot. Science 325, 42–43 (2009). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  4. Tan Z. B. et al. Cooper pair splitting by means of graphene quantum dots. Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 096602 (2015). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  5. Martins F. et al. Noise suppression using symmetric exchange gates in spin qubits. Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 116801 (2016). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  6. Reed M. D. et al. Reduced sensitivity to charge noise in semiconductor spin qubits via symmetric operation. Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 110402 (2016). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  7. Barends R. et al. Digital quantum simulation of fermionic models with a superconducting circuit. Nat. Commun. 6, 7654 (2015). [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  8. Crespi A. et al. Particle statistics affects quantum decay and Fano interference. Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 090201 (2015). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  9. Reimer C. et al. Generation of multiphoton entangled quantum states by means of integrated frequency combs. Science 351, 1176–1180 (2016). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  10. Paskauskas R. & You L. Quantum correlations in two-boson wave functions. Phys. Rev. A 64, 042310 (2001). [Google Scholar]
  11. Li Y. S., Zeng B., Liu X. S. & Long G. L. Entanglement in a two-identical-particle system. Phys. Rev. A 64, 054302 (2001). [Google Scholar]
  12. Schliemann J., Cirac J. I., Kuś M., Lewenstein M. & Loss D. Quantum correlations in two-fermion systems. Phys. Rev. A 64, 022303 (2001). [Google Scholar]
  13. Zanardi P. Quantum entanglement in fermionic lattices. Phys. Rev. A 65, 042101 (2002). [Google Scholar]
  14. Eckert K., Schliemann J., Bruss D. & Lewenstein M. Quantum correlations in systems of indistinguishable particles. Ann. Phys. 299, 88–127 (2002). [Google Scholar]
  15. Ghirardi G. C., Reusch L. & Weber T. Entanglement and properties of composite quantum systems: a conceptual and mathematical analysis. J. Stat. Phys. 108, 49 (2002). [Google Scholar]
  16. Balachandran A., Govindarajan T., de Queiroz A. R. & Reyes-Lega A. Entanglement and particle identity: A unifying approach. Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 080503 (2013). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  17. Killoran N., Cramer M. & Plenio M. B. Extracting entanglement from identical particles. Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 150501 (2014). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  18. Ghirardi G. & Marinatto L. General criterion for the entanglement of two indistinguishable particles. Phys. Rev. A 70, 012109 (2004). [Google Scholar]
  19. Wiseman H. M. & Vaccaro J. A. Entanglement of indistinguishable particles shared between two parties. Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 097902 (2003). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  20. Buscemi F., Bordone P. & Bertoni A. Linear entropy as an entanglement measure in two-fermion systems. Phys. Rev. A 75, 032301 (2007). [Google Scholar]
  21. Reusch A., Sperling J. & Vogel W. Entanglement witnesses for indistinguishable particles. Phys. Rev. A 91, 042324 (2015). [Google Scholar]
  22. Benenti G., Siccardi S. & Strini G. Entanglement in helium. Eur. Phys. J. D 67, 83 (2013). [Google Scholar]
  23. Benatti F., Floreanini R. & Marzolino U. Bipartite entanglement in systems of identical particles: the partial transposition criterion. Ann. Phys. 327, 1304–1319 (2012). [Google Scholar]
  24. Sasaki T., Ichikawa T. & Tsutsui I. Entanglement of indistinguishable particles. Phys. Rev. A 83, 012113 (2011). [Google Scholar]
  25. Benatti F., Floreanini R. & Marzolino U. Entanglement robustness and geometry in systems of identical particles. Phys. Rev. A 85, 042329 (2012). [Google Scholar]
  26. Tichy M. C., Mintert F. & Buchleitner A. Essential entanglement for atomic and molecular physics. J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 44, 192001 (2011). [Google Scholar]
  27. Peres A. Quantum Theory: Concepts and Methods (Springer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 1995). [Google Scholar]
  28. Cohen-Tannoudji C., Diu B. & Laloe F. Quantum mechanics. Vol. 2. (Willey-VCH, Paris, France, 2005). [Google Scholar]
  29. Preskill J. Lecture notes for physics 229: Quantum information and computation. http://www.theory.caltech.edu/people/preskill/ph229/ (1998).
  30. Nielsen M. A. & Chuang I. L. Quantum Computation and Quantum Information (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000). [Google Scholar]
  31. Horodecki R., Horodecki P., Horodecki M. & Horodecki K. Quantum entanglement. Rev. Mod. Phys. 81, 865–942 (2009). [Google Scholar]
  32. Giovannetti V., Lloyd S. & Maccone L. Quantum-enhanced measurements: Beating the standard quantum limit. Science 306, 1330–1336 (2004). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  33. Riedel M. F. et al. Atom-chip-based generation of entanglement for quantum metrology. Nature 464, 1170–1173 (2010). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  34. Benatti F., Alipour S. & Rezakhani A. T. Dissipative quantum metrology in manybody systems of identical particles. New J. Phys. 16, 015023 (2014). [Google Scholar]
  35. Cramer M. et al. Spatial entanglement of bosons in optical lattices. Nat. Commun. 4, 2161 (2013). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  36. Marzolino U. & Buchleitner A. Quantum teleportation with identical particles. Phys. Rev. A. 91, 032316 (2015). [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  37. Marzolino U. & Buchleitner A. Performances and robustness of quantum teleportation with identical particles. Proc. R. Soc. A. 472, 20150621 (2016). [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  38. Susskind L. & Lindesay J. An introduction to black holes, information and the string theory revolution: The holographic universe (World Scientific Pub Co Inc, Singapore, 2004). [Google Scholar]
  39. Belokolos E. D. & Teslyk M. V. Scalar field entanglement entropy of a Schwarzschild black hole from the Schmidt decomposition viewpoint. Class. Quantum Grav. 26, 235008 (2009). [Google Scholar]
  40. Lo Franco R. & Compagno G. Quantum entanglement of identical particles by standard information-theoretic notions. Sci. Rep. 6, 20603 (2016). [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  41. Jaeger G. Quantum information: An overview (Springer-Verlag, New York, 2007). [Google Scholar]
  42. Ekert A. & Knight P. L. Entangled quantum systems and the Schmidt decomposition. Am. J. Phys. 63, 415–423 (1995). [Google Scholar]
  43. Movassagh R. et al. Unfrustrated qudit chains and their ground states. Phys. Rev. A 82, 012318 (2010). [Google Scholar]
  44. Inoue R., Yonehara T., Miyamoto Y., Koashi M. & Kozuma M. Measuring qutrit-qutrit entanglement of orbital angular momentum states of an atomic ensemble and a photon. Phys. Rev. Lett. 103, 110503 (2009). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  45. Lo Franco R., Bellomo B., Maniscalco S. & Compagno G. Dynamics of quantum correlations in two-qubit systems within non-Markovian environments. Int. J. Mod. Phys. B 27, 1345053 (2013). [Google Scholar]
  46. Roch N. et al. Observation of measurement-induced entanglement and quantum trajectories of remote superconducting qubits. Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 170501 (2014). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  47. Modi K., Paterek T., Son W., Vedral V. & Williamson M. Unified view of quantum and classical correlations. Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 080501 (2010). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  48. Kaufman A. et al. Entangling two transportable neutral atoms via local spin exchange. Nature 527, 208–211 (2015). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  49. Lanyon B. P. et al. Manipulating biphotonic qutrits. Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 060504 (2008). [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  50. Kumar K. S., Vepsäläinen A., Danilin S. & Paraoanu G. S. Stimulated raman adiabatic passage in a three-level superconducting circuit. Nat. Commun. 7, 10628 (2016). [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Articles from Scientific Reports are provided here courtesy of Nature Publishing Group

RESOURCES