Starting from the late 60’s many experiments have been performed to verify the violation Bell’s inequality by Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) type correlations. The idea of these experiments being that: (i) Bell’s inequality is a consequence of locality, hence its experimental violation is an indication of non locality; (ii) this violation is a typical quantum phenomenon because any classical system making local choices (either deterministic or random) will produce correlations satisfying this inequality. Both statements (i) and (ii) have been criticized by quantum probability on theoretical grounds (not discussed in the present paper) and the experiment discussed below has been devised to support these theoretical arguments. We emphasize that the goal of our experiment is not to reproduce classically the EPR correlations but to prove that there exist perfectly local classical dynamical systems violating Bell’s inequality. The conclusions of the present experiment are: (I) no contradiction between quantum theory and locality can be deduced from the violation of Bell’s inequality. (II) The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory becomes quite reasonable and not metaphyisic if interpreted at the light of the chameleon effect. (III) One can realize quantum entanglement by classical computers. In section (7) we prove that our experiment also provides a classical analogue of the type of logical (i.e. independent of statistics) incompatibilities pointed out by Greenberger, Home and Zeilinger.

Accardi, L., Regoli, M. (2002). Non-Locality and Quantum Theory: New Experimental Evidence. In P. Tombesi, O. Hirota (a cura di), Quantum Communication, Computing, and Measurement 3 (pp. 313-323). Springer [10.1007/0-306-47114-0_50].

Non-Locality and Quantum Theory: New Experimental Evidence

ACCARDI, LUIGI;REGOLI, MASSIMO
2002-01-01

Abstract

Starting from the late 60’s many experiments have been performed to verify the violation Bell’s inequality by Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) type correlations. The idea of these experiments being that: (i) Bell’s inequality is a consequence of locality, hence its experimental violation is an indication of non locality; (ii) this violation is a typical quantum phenomenon because any classical system making local choices (either deterministic or random) will produce correlations satisfying this inequality. Both statements (i) and (ii) have been criticized by quantum probability on theoretical grounds (not discussed in the present paper) and the experiment discussed below has been devised to support these theoretical arguments. We emphasize that the goal of our experiment is not to reproduce classically the EPR correlations but to prove that there exist perfectly local classical dynamical systems violating Bell’s inequality. The conclusions of the present experiment are: (I) no contradiction between quantum theory and locality can be deduced from the violation of Bell’s inequality. (II) The Copenhagen interpretation of quantum theory becomes quite reasonable and not metaphyisic if interpreted at the light of the chameleon effect. (III) One can realize quantum entanglement by classical computers. In section (7) we prove that our experiment also provides a classical analogue of the type of logical (i.e. independent of statistics) incompatibilities pointed out by Greenberger, Home and Zeilinger.
2002
Settore MAT/06 - PROBABILITA' E STATISTICA MATEMATICA
English
Rilevanza internazionale
Capitolo o saggio
Accardi, L., Regoli, M. (2002). Non-Locality and Quantum Theory: New Experimental Evidence. In P. Tombesi, O. Hirota (a cura di), Quantum Communication, Computing, and Measurement 3 (pp. 313-323). Springer [10.1007/0-306-47114-0_50].
Accardi, L; Regoli, M
Contributo in libro
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Non-Locality and Quantum Theory.pdf

accesso aperto

Dimensione 245.69 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
245.69 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/55339
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 1
social impact