7,522 research outputs found
Bell's theorem as a signature of nonlocality: a classical counterexample
For a system composed of two particles Bell's theorem asserts that averages
of physical quantities determined from local variables must conform to a family
of inequalities. In this work we show that a classical model containing a local
probabilistic interaction in the measurement process can lead to a violation of
the Bell inequalities. We first introduce two-particle phase-space
distributions in classical mechanics constructed to be the analogs of quantum
mechanical angular momentum eigenstates. These distributions are then employed
in four schemes characterized by different types of detectors measuring the
angular momenta. When the model includes an interaction between the detector
and the measured particle leading to ensemble dependencies, the relevant Bell
inequalities are violated if total angular momentum is required to be
conserved. The violation is explained by identifying assumptions made in the
derivation of Bell's theorem that are not fulfilled by the model. These
assumptions will be argued to be too restrictive to see in the violation of the
Bell inequalities a faithful signature of nonlocality.Comment: Extended manuscript. Significant change
A Quantitative Occam's Razor
This paper derives an objective Bayesian "prior" based on considerations of
entropy/information. By this means, it produces a quantitative measure of
goodness of fit (the "H-statistic") that balances higher likelihood against the
number of fitting parameters employed. The method is intended for
phenomenological applications where the underlying theory is uncertain or
unknown.
For example, it can help decide whether the large angle anomalies in the CMB
data should be taken seriously.
I am therefore posting it now, even though it was published before the arxiv
existed.Comment: plainTeX, 16 pages, no figures. Most current version is available at
http://www.physics.syr.edu/~sorkin/some.papers/ (or wherever my home-page may
be
Transverse Demagnetization Dynamics of a Unitary Fermi Gas
Understanding the quantum dynamics of strongly interacting fermions is a
problem relevant to diverse forms of matter, including high-temperature
superconductors, neutron stars, and quark-gluon plasma. An appealing benchmark
is offered by cold atomic gases in the unitary limit of strong interactions.
Here we study the dynamics of a transversely magnetized unitary Fermi gas in an
inhomogeneous magnetic field. We observe the demagnetization of the gas, caused
by diffusive spin transport. At low temperatures, the diffusion constant
saturates to the conjectured quantum-mechanical lower bound ,
where is the particle mass. The development of pair correlations,
indicating the transformation of the initially non-interacting gas towards a
unitary spin mixture, is observed by measuring Tan's contact parameter.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Accepted versio
Constructing quantum games from non-factorizable joint probabilities
A probabilistic framework is developed that gives a unifying perspective on
both the classical and the quantum games. We suggest exploiting peculiar
probabilities involved in Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) experiments to
construct quantum games. In our framework a game attains classical
interpretation when joint probabilities are factorizable and a quantum game
corresponds when these probabilities cannot be factorized. We analyze how
non-factorizability changes Nash equilibria in two-player games while
considering the games of Prisoner's Dilemma, Stag Hunt, and Chicken. In this
framework we find that for the game of Prisoner's Dilemma even non-factorizable
EPR joint probabilities cannot be helpful to escape from the classical outcome
of the game. For a particular version of the Chicken game, however, we find
that the two non-factorizable sets of joint probabilities, that maximally
violates the Clauser-Holt-Shimony-Horne (CHSH) sum of correlations, indeed
result in new Nash equilibria.Comment: Revised in light of referee's comments, submitted to Physical Review
A Rigorous Path Integral for Supersymmetric Quantum Mechanics and the Heat Kernel
In a rigorous construction of the path integral for supersymmetric quantum
mechanics on a Riemann manifold, based on B\"ar and Pf\"affle's use of
piecewise geodesic paths, the kernel of the time evolution operator is the heat
kernel for the Laplacian on forms. The path integral is approximated by the
integral of a form on the space of piecewise geodesic paths which is the
pullback by a natural section of Mathai and Quillen's Thom form of a bundle
over this space.
In the case of closed paths, the bundle is the tangent space to the space of
geodesic paths, and the integral of this form passes in the limit to the
supertrace of the heat kernel.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, no fig
Extracting Lyapunov exponents from the echo dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates on a lattice
We propose theoretically an experimentally realizable method to demonstrate
the Lyapunov instability and to extract the value of the largest Lyapunov
exponent for a chaotic many-particle interacting system. The proposal focuses
specifically on a lattice of coupled Bose-Einstein condensates in the classical
regime describable by the discrete Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We suggest to use
imperfect time-reversal of system's dynamics known as Loschmidt echo, which can
be realized experimentally by reversing the sign of the Hamiltonian of the
system. The routine involves tracking and then subtracting the noise of
virtually any observable quantity before and after the time-reversal. We
support the theoretical analysis by direct numerical simulations demonstrating
that the largest Lyapunov exponent can indeed be extracted from the Loschmidt
echo routine. We also discuss possible values of experimental parameters
required for implementing this proposal
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The Bell Theorem as a Special Case of a Theorem of Bass
The theorem of Bell states that certain results of quantum mechanics violate
inequalities that are valid for objective local random variables. We show that
the inequalities of Bell are special cases of theorems found ten years earlier
by Bass and stated in full generality by Vorob'ev. This fact implies precise
necessary and sufficient mathematical conditions for the validity of the Bell
inequalities. We show that these precise conditions differ significantly from
the definition of objective local variable spaces and as an application that
the Bell inequalities may be violated even for objective local random
variables.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
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