These lectures advocate the idea that quantum entanglement provides a unifying foundation for both statistical physics and high-energy interactions. I argue that, at sufficiently long times or high energies, most quantum systems approach a Maximal Entanglement Limit (MEL) in which phases of quantum states become unobservable, reduced density matrices acquire a thermal form, and probabilistic descriptions emerge without invoking ergodicity or classical randomness. Within this framework, the emergence of probabilistic parton model, thermalization in the break-up of confining strings and in high-energy collisions, and the universal small-\(x\) behavior of structure functions arise as direct consequences of entanglement and geometry of high-dimensional Hilbert space. Abstract Published by the Jagiellonian University 2026 authors
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D.E. Kharzeev (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896166c1944d70ce07552 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5506/aphyspolb.57.4-a1
D.E. Kharzeev
Acta Physica Polonica B
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