Von Neumann entropy

Type of entropy in quantum theory
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In physics, the von Neumann entropy, named after John von Neumann, is an extension of the concept of Gibbs entropy from classical statistical mechanics to quantum statistical mechanics. For a quantum-mechanical system described by a density matrix ρ, the von Neumann entropy is[1]

S = tr ( ρ ln ρ ) , {\displaystyle S=-\operatorname {tr} (\rho \ln \rho ),}

where tr {\displaystyle \operatorname {tr} } denotes the trace and ln denotes the (natural) matrix logarithm. If the density matrix ρ is written in a basis of its eigenvectors | 1 , | 2 , | 3 , {\displaystyle |1\rangle ,|2\rangle ,|3\rangle ,\dots } as

ρ = j η j | j j | , {\displaystyle \rho =\sum _{j}\eta _{j}\left|j\right\rangle \left\langle j\right|,}

then the von Neumann entropy is merely[1]

S = j η j ln η j . {\displaystyle S=-\sum _{j}\eta _{j}\ln \eta _{j}.}

In this form, S can be seen as the information theoretic Shannon entropy.[1]

The von Neumann entropy is also used in different forms (conditional entropies, relative entropies, etc.) in the framework of quantum information theory to characterize the entropy of entanglement.[2]

Background