Spin-1 photons, spin-1/2 electrons, Bell's inequalities, and Feynman's
special perspective on quantum mechanics
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2210.03365v1
- Date: Fri, 7 Oct 2022 07:14:59 GMT
- Title: Spin-1 photons, spin-1/2 electrons, Bell's inequalities, and Feynman's
special perspective on quantum mechanics
- Authors: Masud Mansuripur
- Abstract summary: The Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox that argues for the incompleteness of quantum mechanics as a description of physical reality has been put to rest by John Bell's famous theorem.
We discuss several variants of the Bell inequalities and explore the ways in which they demolish the arguments in favor of local hidden-variable theories.
We also examine the roots of Feynman's attitude toward Bell's theorem in the context of Feynman's special perspective on quantum mechanics.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: The Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) paradox that argues for the incompleteness
of quantum mechanics as a description of physical reality has been put to rest
by John Bell's famous theorem, which inspired numerous experimental tests and
brought about further affirmations of quantum reality. Nevertheless, in his
writings and public presentations, Richard Feynman never acknowledged the
significance of Bell's contribution to the resolution of the EPR paradox. In
this paper, we discuss several variants of the Bell inequalities (including one
that was specifically espoused by Feynman), and explore the ways in which they
demolish the arguments in favor of local hidden-variable theories. We also
examine the roots of Feynman's attitude toward Bell's theorem in the context of
Feynman's special perspective on quantum mechanics.
Related papers
- Generalized Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Steering Paradox [18.5699135339787]
We present a generalized EPR steering paradox, which predicts a contradictory equality $2_Q=left( 1+deltaright)_C$.
We test the paradox through a two-setting steering protocol, and find that the state is steerable if some specific measurement requirements are satisfied.
Our construction also enlightens the building of EPR steering inequality, which may contribute to some schemes for typical quantum teleportation and quantum key distributions.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-05-06T01:25:11Z) - From each of Feynman's and von Neumann's postulates to the restricted
Feynman path integrals: a mathematical theory of temporally continuous
quantum measurements [0.0]
We prove Mensky's restricted Feynman path integrals emerge out of the Feynman's postulate under a simple approximation.
It is also proved that the restricted Feynman path integrals emerge out of von Neumann's postulate on instantaneous measurements.
Results are applied to formulations of the multi-split experiments, the quantum Zeno and the Aharanov-Bohm effects.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-11-23T12:34:59Z) - Quantum dissipation and the virial theorem [22.1682776279474]
We study the celebrated virial theorem for dissipative systems, both classical and quantum.
The non-Markovian nature of the quantum noise leads to novel bath-induced terms in the virial theorem.
We also consider the case of an electrical circuit with thermal noise and analyze the role of non-Markovian noise in the context of the virial theorem.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-02-23T13:28:11Z) - Comment on "Why interference phenomena do not capture the essence of quantum theory" [0.0]
Catani et al argue that it is possible to reproduce the phenomenology of quantum interference classically.
We here want to point out some problems with their argument.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-04-04T18:03:52Z) - Wigner's friends, tunnelling times and Feynman's "only mystery of
quantum mechanics" [0.0]
Recent developments in elementary quantum mechanics have seen a number of extraordinary claims regarding quantum behaviour.
These are, we argue, different disguises of what Feynman described as quantum theory's "only mystery"
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-14T15:53:32Z) - Genuine multipartite entanglement and quantum coherence in an
electron-positron system: Relativistic covariance [117.44028458220427]
We analyze the behavior of both genuine multipartite entanglement and quantum coherence under Lorentz boosts.
A given combination of these quantum resources is shown to form a Lorentz invariant.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-11-26T17:22:59Z) - A glimpse into Feynman's contributions to the debate on the foundations
of quantum mechanics [0.0]
The broad debate on foundational issues in quantum mechanics took place at the 1957 Chapel Hill conference.
One of the most debated questions at Chapel Hill was whether the gravitational field had to be quantized.
The related problem of the wave function collapse, for which Feynman hints to decoherence as a possible solution, is discussed.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-10-30T20:59:56Z) - Bell nonlocality in networks [62.997667081978825]
Bell's theorem proves that quantum theory is inconsistent with local physical models.
In the last decade, the investigation of nonlocality has moved beyond Bell's theorem to consider more sophisticated experiments.
This review discusses the main concepts, methods, results and future challenges in the emerging topic of Bell nonlocality in networks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-21T18:00:48Z) - Observations of on-demand quantum correlation using Poisson-distributed
photon pairs [12.507208769851653]
We experimentally demonstrate the secrete of quantumness using the wave nature of single photons.
No clear answer exists for what quantum entanglement should be and how to generate it.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-16T02:13:06Z) - Quantum postulate vs. quantum nonlocality: Is Devil in h? [0.0]
Bell's model with hidden variables is that it straightforwardly contradicts to the Heinsenberg's uncertainty and generally Bohr's complementarity principles.
Bell's approach with hidden variable straightforwardly implies rejection of the quantum postulate.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-03-12T11:59:14Z) - Quantum Mechanical description of Bell's experiment assumes Locality [91.3755431537592]
Bell's experiment description assumes the (Quantum Mechanics-language equivalent of the classical) condition of Locality.
This result is complementary to a recently published one demonstrating that non-Locality is necessary to describe said experiment.
It is concluded that, within the framework of Quantum Mechanics, there is absolutely no reason to believe in the existence of non-Local effects.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-02-27T15:04:08Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.