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On Peres' statement "opposite momenta lead to opposite directions", decaying systems and optical imaging
We re-examine Peres' statement ``opposite momenta lead to opposite
directions''. It will be shown that Peres' statement is only valid in the large
distance or large time limit. In the short distance or short time limit an
additional deviation from perfect alignment occurs due to the uncertainty of
the location of the source. This error contribution plays a major role in
Popper's orginal experimental proposal. Peres' statement applies rather to the
phenomenon of optical imaging, which was regarded by him as a verification of
his statement. This is because this experiment can in a certain sense be seen
as occurring in the large distance limit. We will also reconsider both
experiments from the viewpoint of Bohmian mechanics. In Bohmian mechanics
particles with exactly opposite momenta will move in opposite directions. In
addition it will prove particularly usefull to use Bohmian mechanics because
the Bohmian trajectories coincide with the conceptual trajectories drawn by
Pittman et al. In this way Bohmian mechanics provides a theoretical basis for
these conceptual trajectories.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures, LaTex, to be published in Found. Phy
The Discovery of the Higgs Boson with the CMS Detector and its Implications for Supersymmetry and Cosmology
The discovery of the long awaited Higgs boson is described using data from
the CMS detector at the LHC. In the SM the masses of fermions and the heavy
gauge bosons are generated by the interactions with the Higgs field, so all
couplings are related to the observed masses. Indeed, all observed couplings
are consistent with the predictions from the Higgs mechanism, both to vector
bosons and fermions implying that masses are indeed consistent of being
generated by the interactions with the Higgs field. However, on a cosmological
scale the mass of the universe seems not to be related to the Higgs field: the
baryonic mass originates from the binding energy of the quarks inside the
nuclei and dark matter is not even predicted in the SM, so the origin of its
mass is unknown. The dominant energy component in the universe, the dark
energy, yields an accelerated expansion of the universe, so its repulsive
gravity most likely originates from a kind of vacuum energy. The Higgs field
would be the prime candidate for this, if the energy density would not be many
orders of magnitude too high, as will be calculated. The Higgs mass is found to
be 125.70.3(stat.)0.3(syst.) GeV, which is below 130 GeV, i.e. in the
range predicted by supersymmetry. This may be the strongest hint for
supersymmetry in spite of the fact that the predicted supersymmetric particles
have not been discovered so far.Comment: 26 pages, Conference Proceedings Time and Matter (TAM2013), Venice,
Feb. 201
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