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Quantum entanglement in nuclear fission

Qiang Yu, Junchen Pei, Kyle Godbey

2025Physics Letters B11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nuclear fission presents a unique example of quantum entanglement in strongly interacting many-body systems. A heavy nucleus can split into hundreds of combinations of two complementary fragments in the fission process. The entanglement of fragment wave functions is persistent even after separation and impacts the partition of particles and energies between fragments. Based on microscopic dynamical calculations of the fission of 240 Pu, this work finds that dynamical quantum entanglement is indispensable in the appearance of sawtooth distributions of average excitation energies of fragments and thus neutron multiplicities, but not in average neutron excess of fragments. Both sawtooth slopes from particle-number projections are found to be steep – a feature which can be alleviated by random fluctuations. The persistent entanglement is mainly due to non-adiabatic dynamics since the final splitting is so fast that the non-localization of wave functions is kept during the separation. These findings may impact the understanding of quantum entanglement more broadly in mesoscopic systems.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsQuantum entanglementFissionNuclear physicsNuclear fissionQuantum mechanicsQuantumNeutronNuclear physics research studiesNuclear reactor physics and engineeringQuantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions
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