7,695 research outputs found
On a purported local extension of the quantum formalism
Since the early days of quantum mechanics, a number of physicists have doubted whether quantum mechanics was a complete theory and wondered whether it was possible to extend the quantum formalism by adjoining hidden variables.1 In 1952, Bohm answered this question in the
affirmative2 and in doing so refuted von Neumann’s influential yet flawed proof that no such extension was possible.3 However, Bohm’s hidden variable theory has not won wide support partly because the theory is nonlocal: there is instantaneous action at a distance. Since there is an obvious problem reconciling such nonlocal theories with Relativity, hidden variable theories would look much more promising if they also satisfied locality. Accordingly, the question as to whether or not local hidden variable theories are possible assumes great significance. In 1964 Bell appeared to prove that this question had a negative answer:4 He showed that any local hidden variables theory is incompatible with certain quantum mechanical predictions. Since these predictions
have been borne out by the experiments of Aspect and others5 the prospects for hidden variable theories have looked grim. Angelidis disagrees.6 He claims to have done to Bell what Bohm did to von Neummann: He has found a theory which is local and which generates a family of probability functions converging uniformly to the probability function generated by quantum mechanics. If this were true, then Angelidis’ theory would be a counterexample to Bell’s theorem and a promising path would once again be open to hidden variable theorists.
Unfortunately, Angelidis’ theory fails to live up to his claims: As formulated, the theory does not make the same predictions as quantum mechanics, and while there is a natural extension of his theory which does make the same predictions, the extension is not local. Bell’s Theorem stands
Mass Loss In M67 Giants: Evidence From Isochrone Fitting
We present a study of the stellar content of the open cluster M67. We have
computed new evolutionary sequences of stellar models with solar abundance that
cover all phases of evolution from the Zero-Age Main Sequence to the bright end
of the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB). We examine the fit between the calculated
and the observed red giant branch (RGB) in particular, and discuss factors that
most influence its quality. The distinct color gap between the RGB and the
clump giants is compared with the temperature gap between the He-burning tracks
and the computed 5 Gyr isochrone. This purely differential approach strongly
indicates that the clump giants have M \lta 0.70\msun\ , implying an amount
of mass loss ( \msun) well in excess of that found in globular
cluster stars. Observational constraints on mass loss processes favor the
interpretation that mass loss in cool low-mass giant stars increases with
metallicity.Comment: 21pp., plain TeX astro-ph/yymmnn
Partial separability and entanglement criteria for multiqubit quantum states
We explore the subtle relationships between partial separability and
entanglement of subsystems in multiqubit quantum states and give experimentally
accessible conditions that distinguish between various classes and levels of
partial separability in a hierarchical order. These conditions take the form of
bounds on the correlations of locally orthogonal observables. Violations of
such inequalities give strong sufficient criteria for various forms of partial
inseparability and multiqubit entanglement. The strength of these criteria is
illustrated by showing that they are stronger than several other well-known
entanglement criteria (the fidelity criterion, violation of Mermin-type
separability inequalities, the Laskowski-\.Zukowski criterion and the
D\"ur-Cirac criterion), and also by showing their great noise robustness for a
variety of multiqubit states, including N-qubit GHZ states and Dicke states.
Furthermore, for N greater than or equal to 3 they can detect bound entangled
states. For all these states, the required number of measurement settings for
implementation of the entanglement criteria is shown to be only N+1. If one
chooses the familiar Pauli matrices as single-qubit observables, the
inequalities take the form of bounds on the anti-diagonal matrix elements of a
state in terms of its diagonal matrix elements.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figures. v4: published versio
Maximal entanglement of two spinor Bose-Einstein condensates
Starting with two weakly-coupled anti-ferromagnetic spinor condensates, we
show that by changing the sign of the coefficient of the spin interaction,
, via an optically-induced Feshbach resonance one can create an
entangled state consisting of two anti-correlated ferromagnetic condensates.
This state is maximally entangled and a generalization of the Bell state from
two anti-correlated spin-1/2 particles to two anti-correlated spin atomic
samples, where is the total number of atoms.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in PR
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