ID: quant-ph/0206070

A simple demonstration of Bell's theorem involving two observers and no probabilities or inequalities

June 11, 2002

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The simplest Bell's theorem, with or without locality

January 6, 2005

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Charles Tresser
Quantum Physics

We prove here a version of Bell's Theorem that is simpler than any previous one. The contradiction of Bell's inequality with Quantum Mechanics in the new version is not cured by non-locality so that this version allows one to single out classical realism, and not locality, as the common source of all false inequalities of Bell's type.

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Why do Bell experiments?

August 23, 2000

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Ian C. Percival
Quantum Physics

Experiments over three decades have been unable to demonstrate weak nonlocality in the sense of Bell unambiguously, without loopholes. The last important loophole remaining is the detection loophole, which is being tackled by at least three experimental groups. This letter counters five common beliefs about Bell experiments, and presents alternative scenarios for future developments.

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Proposal to use Humans to switch settings in a Bell experiment

May 12, 2017

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Lucien Hardy
Quantum Physics

In this paper I discuss how we might go about about performing a Bell experiment in which humans are used to decide the settings at each end. To get a sufficiently high rate of switching at both ends, I suggest an experiment over a distance of about 100km with 100 people at each end wearing EEG headsets, with the signals from these headsets being used to switch the settings. The radical possibility we wish to investigate is that, when humans are used to decide the settings ...

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A note on the violation of Bell's inequality

March 17, 2017

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Thomas Schürmann
General Physics

With Bell's inequalities one has a formal expression to show how essentially all local theories of natural phenomena that are formulated within the framework of realism may be tested using a simple experimental arrangement. For the case of entangled pairs of spin-1/2 particles we propose an alternative measurement setup which is consistent to the necessary assumptions corresponding to the derivation of the Bell inequalities. We find that the Bell inequalities are never violat...

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A possible statistics loophole in Bell's theorem

December 20, 2024

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Andrea Aiello
General Physics

Bell's theorem proves the incompatibility between quantum mechanics and local realistic hidden-variable theories. In this paper we show that, contrary to a common belief, the theoretical proof of Bell's theorem is not affected by counterfactual reasoning. Then, we demonstrate that the experimental verification of this theorem may be affected in an unknowable way by our ignorance about the probability distribution of the hidden variables. Our study is based on the standard the...

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What Bell Did

August 8, 2014

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Tim Maudlin
History and Philosophy of Ph...

On the 50th anniversary of Bell's monumental 1964 paper, there is still widespread misunderstanding about exactly what Bell proved. This misunderstanding derives in turn from a failure to appreciate the earlier arguments of Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen. I retrace the history and logical structure of these arguments in order to clarify the proper conclusion, namely that any world that displays violations of Bell's inequality for experiments done far from one another must be no...

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Bell's Theorem : The Naive View of an Experimentalist

February 2, 2004

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Alain Aspect
Quantum Physics

In the first part of this presentation (sections 2 to 6), I show that Bell's Inequalities provide a quantitative criterion to test "reasonable" Supplementary Parameters Theories versus Quantum Mechanics. Following Bell, I first explain the motivations for considering supplementary parameters theories: the argument is based on an analysis of the famous Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) Gedankenexperiment . Introducing a reasonable Locality Condition, we will then derive Bell's the...

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A proof of Bell's inequality in quantum mechanics using causal interactions

July 20, 2012

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James M. Robins, Tyler J. VanderWeele, Richard D. Gill
Applications
History and Philosophy of Ph...

We give a simple proof of Bell's inequality in quantum mechanics which, in conjunction with experiments, demonstrates that the local hidden variables assumption is false. The proof sheds light on relationships between the notion of causal interaction and interference between particles.

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Proposal For Testing Bell's Conjecture

September 3, 2008

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Luiz Carlos Ryff
Quantum Physics

A simple nonlocal mechanism for Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) correlations inspired by Bell's conjecture (according to which "behind the scenes something is going faster than light") is suggested, and an experimental test is proposed.

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Tests of Bell Inequalities

July 10, 2001

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L. Vaidman
Quantum Physics

According to recent reports, the last loopholes in testing Bell's inequality are closed. It is argued that the really important task in this field has not been tackled yet and that the leading experiments claiming to close locality and detection efficiency loopholes, although making a very significant progress, have conceptual drawbacks. The important task is constructing quantum devices which will allow winning games of certain correlated replies against any classical team. ...

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