Entanglement of classical and quantum short-range dynamics in mean-field systems
Annals of Physics 434 : (2021) // Article ID 168643
Abstract
The relationship between classical and quantum mechanics is
usually understood via the limit ¯h → 0. This is the underlying
idea behind the quantization of classical objects. The apparent
incompatibility of general relativity with quantum mechanics
and quantum field theory has challenged for many decades this
basic idea. We recently showed (Bru and de Siqueira Pedra,
0000; Bru and de Siqueira Pedra, 2021 [46,47]) the emergence
of classical dynamics for very general quantum lattice systems
with mean-field interactions, without (complete) suppression of
its quantum features, in the infinite volume limit. This leads
to a theoretical framework in which the classical and quantum
worlds are entangled. Such an entanglement is noteworthy and is
a consequence of the highly non-local character of mean-field in-
teractions. Therefore, this phenomenon should not be restricted
to systems with mean-field interactions only, but should also
appear in presence of interactions that are sufficiently long-
range, yielding effective, classical background fields, in the spirit
of the Higgs mechanism of quantum field theory. In order to
present the result in a less abstract way than in its original
version, here we apply it to a concrete, physically relevant,
example and discuss, by this means, various important aspects