Paradoxical quantum phenomenon measured for the first time

© Thomas Schweigler, TU Wien
© Thomas Schweigler, TU Wien
© Thomas Schweigler, TU Wien How do quantum particles share information? A peculiar conjecture about quantum information has been experimentally confirmed at the TU Wien. Some things are related, others are not. Suppose you randomly select a person from a crowd who is significantly taller than the average. In that case, there is a good chance that they will also weigh more than the average. Statistically, one quantity also contains some information about the other. Quantum physics allows for even stronger links between different quantities: different particles or parts of an extensive quantum system can "share" a certain amount of information. There are curious theoretical predictions about this: surprisingly, the measure of this "mutual information" does not depend on the size of the system but only on its surface.
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