54,142 research outputs found
Correlation functions, Bell's inequalities and the fundamental conservation laws
I derive the correlation function for a general theory of two-valued spin
variables that satisfy the fundamental conservation law of angular momentum.
The unique theory-independent correlation function is identical to the quantum
mechanical correlation function. I prove that any theory of correlations of
such discrete variables satisfying the fundamental conservation law of angular
momentum violates the Bell's inequalities. Taken together with the Bell's
theorem, this result has far reaching implications. No theory satisfying
Einstein locality, reality in the EPR-Bell sense, and the validity of the
conservation law can be constructed. Therefore, all local hidden variable
theories are incompatible with fundamental symmetries and conservation laws.
Bell's inequalities can be obeyed only by violating a conservation law. The
implications for experiments on Bell's inequalities are obvious. The result
provides new insight regarding entanglement, and its measures.Comment: LaTeX, 12pt, 11 pages, 2 figure
Comparison of AIS Versus TMS Data Collected over the Virginia Piedmont
The Airborne Imaging Spectrometer (AIS, NS001 Thematic Mapper Simlulator (TMS), and Zeiss camera collected remotely sensed data simultaneously on October 27, 1983, at an altitude of 6860 meters (22,500 feet). AIS data were collected in 32 channels covering 1200 to 1500 nm. A simple atmospheric correction was applied to the AIS data, after which spectra for four cover types were plotted. Spectra for these ground cover classes showed a telescoping effect for the wavelength endpoints. Principal components were extracted from the shortwave region of the AIS (1200 to 1280 nm), full spectrum AIS (1200 to 1500 nm) and TMS (450 to 12,500 nm) to create three separate three-component color image composites. A comparison of the TMS band 5 (1000 to 1300 nm) to the six principal components from the shortwave AIS region (1200 to 1280 nm) showed improved visual discrimination of ground cover types. Contrast of color image composites created from principal components showed the AIS composites to exhibit a clearer demarcation between certain ground cover types but subtle differences within other regions of the imagery were not as readily seen
Spin dynamics in a superconductor / ferromagnet proximity system
The ferromagnetic resonance of thin sputtered Ni80Fe20 films grown on Nb is
measured. By varying the temperature and thickness of the Nb the role of the
superconductivity on the whole ferromagnetic layer in these heterostructures is
explored. The change in the spin transport properties below the superconducting
transition of the Nb is found to manifest itself in the Ni80Fe20 layer by a
sharpening in the resonance of the ferromagnet, or a decrease in the effective
Gilbert damping co-efficient. This dynamic proximity effect is in contrast to
low frequency studies in these systems, where the effect of the superconductor
is confined to a small region in the ferromagnet. We interpret this in terms of
the spin pumping model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be submitted for publicatio
On constructions preserving the asymptotic topology of metric spaces
We prove that graph products constructed over infinite graphs with bounded
clique number preserve finite asymptotic dimension. We also study the extent to
which Dranishnikov's property C, and Dranishnikov and Zarichnyi's straight
finite decomposition complexity are preserved by constructions such as unions,
free products, and group extensions.Comment: 13 pages, accepted for publication in NC Journal of Mathematics and
Statistic
A comparative survey of job prospects for the period 1991-1996
How discouraging is the job market for young scientists these days? It seems that most scientists who have tried to land a job in· recent years can tell you, unambiguously, Very. Are prospects bleaker for some experimental psychologists than for others? To us, it subjectively seemed so. In an effort to answer this question more rigorously. we analyzed issues of the APS Observer Employment Bulletin, published by the American Psychological Society, from 1991-1996. Admittedly, the number of classified ads for jobs in a specific category is only one index of the job prospects for that category, but it is a start
Characterizing the nonlocal correlations of particles that never interacted
Quantum systems that have never interacted can become nonlocally correlated
through a process called entanglement swapping. To characterize nonlocality in
this context, we introduce local models where quantum systems that are
initially uncorrelated are described by uncorrelated local variables. While a
pair of maximally entangled qubits prepared in the usual way (i.e., emitted
from a common source) requires a visibility close to 70% to violate a Bell
inequality, we show that an entangled pair generated through entanglement
swapping will already violate a Bell inequality for visibilities as low as 50%
under our assumption.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
No Signalling and Quantum Key Distribution
Standard quantum key distribution protocols are provably secure against
eavesdropping attacks, if quantum theory is correct. It is theoretically
interesting to know if we need to assume the validity of quantum theory to
prove the security of quantum key distribution, or whether its security can be
based on other physical principles. The question would also be of practical
interest if quantum mechanics were ever to fail in some regime, because a
scientifically and technologically advanced eavesdropper could perhaps use
post-quantum physics to extract information from quantum communications without
necessarily causing the quantum state disturbances on which existing security
proofs rely. Here we describe a key distribution scheme provably secure against
general attacks by a post-quantum eavesdropper who is limited only by the
impossibility of superluminal signalling. The security of the scheme stems from
violation of a Bell inequality.Comment: Clarifications and minor revisions in response to comments. Final
version; to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
J.S. Bell's Concept of Local Causality
John Stewart Bell's famous 1964 theorem is widely regarded as one of the most
important developments in the foundations of physics. It has even been
described as "the most profound discovery of science." Yet even as we approach
the 50th anniversary of Bell's discovery, its meaning and implications remain
controversial. Many textbooks and commentators report that Bell's theorem
refutes the possibility (suggested especially by Einstein, Podolsky, and Rosen
in 1935) of supplementing ordinary quantum theory with additional ("hidden")
variables that might restore determinism and/or some notion of an
observer-independent reality. On this view, Bell's theorem supports the
orthodox Copenhagen interpretation. Bell's own view of his theorem, however,
was quite different. He instead took the theorem as establishing an "essential
conflict" between the now well-tested empirical predictions of quantum theory
and relativistic \emph{local causality}. The goal of the present paper is, in
general, to make Bell's own views more widely known and, in particular, to
explain in detail Bell's little-known mathematical formulation of the concept
of relativistic local causality on which his theorem rests. We thus collect and
organize many of Bell's crucial statements on these topics, which are scattered
throughout his writings, into a self-contained, pedagogical discussion
including elaborations of the concepts "beable", "completeness", and
"causality" which figure in the formulation. We also show how local causality
(as formulated by Bell) can be used to derive an empirically testable Bell-type
inequality, and how it can be used to recapitulate the EPR argument.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figure
Cultivation and use of bryophytes as experimental material
Bryophytes can be grown successfully if keptmoist, supplied
with nutrients, and out of direct sunlight. They remain greener
on peat than on sand. However, difficulties were encountered when
attempting to grow mosses and liverworts in an unshaded
glasshouse, in spring and summer. Even spraying hourly with water
did not prevent scorching and desiccation.
Growth can be measured using a variety of techniques; height
measurement and shoot elongation from thread markers proved the
most reliabl
Loophole-free Bell test based on local precertification of photon's presence
A loophole-free violation of Bell inequalities is of fundamental importance
for demonstrating quantum nonlocality and long-distance device-independent
secure communication. However, transmission losses represent a fundamental
limitation for photonic loophole-free Bell tests. A local precertification of
the presence of the photons immediately before the local measurements may solve
this problem. We show that local precertification is feasible by integrating
three current technologies: (i) enhanced single-photon down-conversion to
locally create a flag photon, (ii) nanowire-based superconducting single-photon
detectors for a fast flag detection, and (iii) superconducting transition-edge
sensors to close the detection loophole. We carry out a precise space-time
analysis of the proposed scheme, showing its viability and feasibility.Comment: REVTeX4, 7 Pages, 1 figur
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