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Published August 5, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Decoherence by warm horizons

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Recently Danielson, Satishchandran, and Wald (DSW) have shown that quantum superpositions held outside of Killing horizons will decohere at a steady rate. This occurs because of the inevitable radiation of soft photons (gravitons), which imprint a electromagnetic (gravitational) "which-path" memory onto the horizon. Rather than appealing to this global description, an experimenter ought to also have a local description for the cause of decoherence. One might intuitively guess that this is just the bombardment of Hawking/Unruh radiation on the system, however simple calculations challenge this idea—the same superposition held in a finite temperature inertial laboratory does not decohere at the DSW rate. In this work we provide a local description of the decoherence by mapping the DSW setup onto a worldline-localized model resembling an Unruh-DeWitt particle detector. We present an interpretation in terms of random local forces which do not sufficiently self-average over long times. Using the Rindler horizon as a concrete example we clarify the crucial role of temperature, and show that the Unruh effect is the only quantum mechanical effect underlying these random forces. A general lesson is that for an environment which induces Ohmic friction on the central system (as one gets from the classical Abraham-Lorentz-Dirac force, in an accelerating frame) the fluctuation-dissipation theorem implies that when this environment is at finite temperature it will cause steady decoherence on the central system. Our results agree with DSW and provide the complementary local perspective. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

Copyright and License

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI. Funded by SCOAP3.

Acknowledgement

The authors thank Gautam Satishchandran, Daine Danielson, and Hongji Wei for useful discussions. Research of Y. C., A. D., and J. W. G. is supported by the Simons Foundation (Award No. 568762), and NSF Grant No. PHY-2011968. J. W. G. is additionally supported by a fellowship at the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical
Physics, a Presidential Postdoctoral Fellowship, and the DOE under Award No. DE-SC001163.

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Additional details

Created:
August 12, 2024
Modified:
August 12, 2024