Are entangled particles connected by wormholes? Evidence for the ER=EPR conjecture from entropy inequalities

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Abstract

If spacetime is built out of quantum bits, does the shape of space depend on how the bits are entangled? The ER=EPR conjecture relates the entanglement entropy of a collection of black holes to the cross sectional area of Einstein-Rosen (ER) bridges (or wormholes) connecting them. We show that the geometrical entropy of classical ER bridges satisfies the subadditivity, triangle, strong subadditivity, and Cadney-Linden-Winter inequalities. These are nontrivial properties of entanglement entropy, so this is evidence for ER=EPR. We further show that the entanglement entropy associated with classical ER bridges has nonpositive tripartite information. This is not a property of entanglement entropy, in general. For example, the entangled four qubit pure state |GHZ4©=(|0000©+|1111©)/2 has positive tripartite information, so this state cannot be described by a classical ER bridge. Large black holes with massive amounts of entanglement between them can fail to have a classical ER bridge if they are built out of |GHZ4© states. States with nonpositive tripartite information are called monogamous. We conclude that classical ER bridges require monogamous EPR correlations. © 2014 American Physical Society.

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Gharibyan, H., & Penna, R. F. (2014). Are entangled particles connected by wormholes? Evidence for the ER=EPR conjecture from entropy inequalities. Physical Review D - Particles, Fields, Gravitation and Cosmology, 89(6). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.066001

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