432 research outputs found
Born's Principle, Action-Reaction Problem and Arrow of Time
We try to obtain Born's principle as a result of a subquantum heat death,
using classical -theorem and the definition of a proper quantum
-theorem, within the framwork of Bohm's theory. We shall show the
possibility of solving the problem of action-reaction asymmetry present in
Bohm's theory and the arrow of time problem in our procedure.Comment: 7 pages, Latex file, to appear in Foundations of Physics Letter
Born's principle and Action-Reaction problem
In a recent paper, A.Valentini tried to obtain Born's principle as a result
of a subquantum heat death, using classical H-theorem and the definition of a
proper quantum H-theorem within the framwork of Bohm's theory. In this paper,
we shall show the possibility of solving the problem of action-reaction
asymmetry present in Bohm's theory by modifying Valentini's procedure. However,
we get his main result too.Comment: Latex file, 9 pages, some extra explanation have been omitte
The Best Copenhagen Tunneling Times
Recently, people have caculated tunneling's characteristic times within
Bohmian mechanics. Contrary to some characteristic times defined within the
framework of the standard interpretation of quantum mechanics, these have
reasonable values. Here, we introduce one of available definitions for
tunnelling's characteristic times within the standard interpretation as the
best definition that can be accepted for the tunneling times. We show that, due
to experimental limitations, Bohmian mechanics leads to same tunneling times.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
A two-slit experiment which distinguishes between standard and Bohmian quantum mechanics
In this investigation, we have suggested a special two-slit experiment which
can distinguish between the standard and the Bohmian quantum mechanics. At the
first step, we have shown that observable individual predictions obtained from
these two theories are inconsistent for a special case. But, at the ensemble
level, they are consistent as was expected. Then, as another special case and
using selective detection, it is shown that an observable disagreement between
the two theories can exist at the ensemble level of particles. This can
encourage new efforts for finding other inconsistencies between the two
theories, theoretically and experimentally.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex, no figure
Locality and the Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger Theorem
In all local realistic theories worked out till now, locality is considered
as a basic assumption. Most people in the field consider the inconsistency
between local realistic theories and quantum mechanics to be a result of
non-local nature of quantum mechanics. In this Paper, we derive the
Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger type theorem for particles with instantaneous
(non-local) interactions at the hidden-variable level. Then, we show that the
previous contradiction still exists between quantum mechanics and non-local
hidden variable models.Comment: 9 pages, comments welcom
On the Experimental Incompatibility Between Standard and Bohmian Quantum Mechanics
Recently, three experiments have been proposed in order to show that the
standard and Bohmian quantum mechanics can have different predictions at the
individual level of particles. However, these thought experiments have
encountered some objections. In this work, it is our purpose to show that our
basic conclusions about those experiments are still intact.Comment: 8 pages, no figures, Revte
Single-particle Bell-type Inequality
It is generally believed that Bell's inequality holds for the case of
entangled states, including two correlated particles or special states of a
single particle. Here, we derive a single-particle Bell's inequality for two
correlated spin states at two successive times, appealing to the statistical
independence condition in an ideal experiment, for a locally causal hidden
variables theory. We show that regardless of the locality assumption, the
inequality can be violated by some quantum predictions.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure, Latex file, To appear in Annales de la Fondation
Louis de Brogli
Locality Is An Unnecessary Assumption of Bell's Theorem
Without imposing the locality condition,it is shown that quantum mechanics
cannot reproduce all the predictions of a special stochastic realistic model
used in certain spin-correlation experiments.This shows that the so-called
locality condition is an unnecessary assumption of Bell's theorem.Comment: 5 pages LaTe
Reply to: Comment on "Bohmian prediction about a two double-slit experiment and its disagreement with SQM"
In a recent paper, Struyve et al. [Struyve W, De Baere W, De Neve J and De
Weirdt S 2003 J. Phys. A 36 1525] attempted to show that the thought experiment
proposed in [Golshani M and Akhavan O 2001 J. Phys. A 34 5259,
quant-ph/0103101] cannot distinguish between standard and Bohmian quantum
mechanics. Here, we want to show that, in spite of their objection, our
conclusion still holds out.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, Late
Interaction of a two-level atom with a classical field in the context of Bohmian mechanics
We discuss Bohmian paths of the two-level atoms moving in a waveguide through
an external resonance-producing field, perpendicular to the waveguide, and
localized in a region of finite diameter. The time spent by a particle in a
potential region is not well-defined in the standard quantum mechanics, but it
is well-defined in the Bohmian mechanics. Bohm's theory is used for calculating
the average time spent by a transmitted particle inside the field region and
the arrival-time distributions at the edges of the field region. Using the
Runge-Kutta method for the integration of the guidance law, some Bohmian
trajectories were also calculated. Numerical results are presented for the
special case of a Gaussian wave packet.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
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