An artist's representation of quantum entanglement in nature

Physics Colloquium with Subir Sachdev on Quantum Entanglement in Nature: High Temperature Superconductors and Black Holes

Subir Sachdev (hosted by Tansu Daylan) from Harvard University will be presenting the annual Feenberg Lecture, "Quantum Entanglement in Nature: High Temperature Superconductors and Black Holes"

Entanglement is the strangest feature of quantum theory, which Einstein dubbed ''spooky action at a distance." Quantum entanglement can occur on a large scale with millions of electrons, leading to "strange metals" and novel superconductors which can conduct electricity without resistance even at relatively high temperatures. Remarkably, related entanglement structures also arise across the horizon of a black hole, and give rise to Hawking’s black hole entropy. Sachdev will describe simple models of many particle quantum entanglement which have shed light on long-standing problems in these distinct physical system