Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Wringing John Bell vocabulary the EPR paradox Bell’s theorem Bell’s assumptions what does it mean? Guy Blaylock Williams.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Entangled Polarized Photons. Crystals can produce pairs of photons, heading in different directions. These pairs always show the same polarization. ?
Advertisements

An Introduction to Physics
QUANTUM MECHANICS Probability & Uncertainty 1.Probability 2.Uncertainty 3.Double-slit photons.
1 quantum teleportation David Riethmiller 28 May 2007.
5.3 Physics and the Quantum Mechanical Model
Blaylock - Clark University 2/17/10 Wringing John Bell vocabulary the EPR paradox Bell’s theorem Bell’s assumptions what does it mean? Guy Blaylock Clark.
Quantum mechanics for Advaitins
Bell inequality & entanglement
Bell’s inequalities and their uses Mark Williamson The Quantum Theory of Information and Computation
Quantum Philosophy EPR and Bell's Inequalities By Bill Kavanagh
Entanglement and Bell’s Inequalities Aaron Michalko Kyle Coapman Alberto Sepulveda James MacNeil Madhu Ashok Brian Sheffler.
Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) John A Clark Dept. of Computer Science University of York, UK
Quantum Entanglement and Bell’s Inequalities Kristin M. Beck and Jacob E. Mainzer Demonstrating quantum entanglement of photons via the violation of Bell’s.
The Many-Weirdnesses Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics
PHYS Quantum Mechanics PHYS Quantum Mechanics Dr Jon Billowes Nuclear Physics Group (Schuster Building, room 4.10)
Quantum Entanglement David Badger Danah Albaum. Some thoughts on entanglement... “Spooky action at a distance.” -Albert Einstein “It is a problem that.
Chapter 22 The EPR paper and Bell's theorem by Steve Kurtz.
Friday Forum Presentation What Part of the Quantum Theory Don’t You Understand? Frank Rioux Department of Chemistry March 23, 2007.
Truong Pham.  Ψ: state of a particle  Φ: state of a measuring device  Ψ(+) : state of a particle that has an upspin  Ψ(-): state of a particle.
Quantum theory and Consciousness This is an interactive discussion. Please feel free to interrupt at any time with your questions and comments.
Study and characterisation of polarisation entanglement JABIR M V Photonic sciences laboratory, PRL.
Introductory Video Quantum Mechanics Quantum Mechanics.
By Kate Hogan.  Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 1917  Studied at Pennsylvania State College and University of California, Berkeley  Manhattan Project.
Quantum Superposition, Quantum Entanglement and Quantum Technologies
Physics is becoming too difficult for physicists. — David Hilbert (mathematician)
Philosophical Interpretations of
Institute of Technical Physics Entanglement – Beamen – Quantum cryptography The weird quantum world Bernd Hüttner CPhys FInstP DLR Stuttgart.
In 1887,when Photoelectric Effect was first introduced by Heinrich Hertz, the experiment was not able to be explained using classical principles.
The Copenhagen interpretation Born, Heisenberg, Schrödinger, Bohr ( ) Even though the Copenhagen interpretation is supposed to be the “orthodox”
Dr Martin Hendry University of Glasgow Lumps Light in or ? Reach for the Stars.
QUANTUM TELEPORTATION
Fundamental Physics Wolfram vs. Einstein, Podolsky, Rosen, Bell, Schrödinger, Bohr, Heisenberg, Planck, Born, Minkowski, Schwarzschild, Misner, Thorne,
Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen’s argument of incompleteness of quantum mechanics.
Steering witnesses and criteria for the (non-)existence of local hidden state (LHS) models Eric Cavalcanti, Steve Jones, Howard Wiseman Centre for Quantum.
Quantum Physics Mathematics. Quantum Physics Tools in Real Life Reality.
 The Bohr model describes definite electron energy levels within atoms  Bohr’s model only applied to hydrogen – it has been replaced by more sophisticated.
1 3/10 Day 16: Questions? Hidden Variables Local Realism & EPR “ The problems of language here are really serious. We wish to speak in some way about the.
Quantum Cryptography. Cryptography  Art of writing messages so that no one other than intended receiver can read it.  Encryption – Performing mathematical.
Apr 4, 2007 PHYS 117B.02 1 PHYS 117B.02 Lecture Apr 4 The last few lectures we’ve been switching gears from classical to quantum physics This way: The.
It’s all done with Mirrors Many of the predictions of quantum mechanics are verified with ordinary matter particles (like electrons), but these experiments.
W Helicity Analysis: Matrix Element Method Sensitivity and optimization using 0-tag events Jorge A. Pérez Hernández UAEM, México IPM Summer FNAL.
1 quantum mysteries again! quantum mysteries again! classical vs. quantum correlations ‘ quantum mechanics is weird” N. Bohr Bell’s inequality? QM VIOLATES.
Quantum mechanical phenomena. The study between quanta and elementary particles. Quanta – an indivisible entity of a quantity that has the same value.
Bell tests with Photons Henry Clausen. Outline:  Bell‘s theorem  Photon Bell Test by Aspect  Loopholes  Photon Bell Test by Weihs  Outlook Photon.
1 entanglement-quantum teleportation entanglement-quantum teleportation entanglement (what is it?) quantum teleportation (intuitive & mathematical) ‘ quantum.
Physics 2170 – Spring Some interesting aspects of quantum mechanics The last homework is due at 12:50pm.
Nonlinear Optics Lab. Hanyang Univ. Chapter 9. Wave-Particle Duality of Light 9.1 What is a Photon ? Whether light consists of particles or waves ? - ~1700,
Quantum Theory By: Brian Williams. Blackbody Radiation Around the turn of the 20 th century, physicists were studying the total energy carried by all.
4.3 IB Wave Characteristics
The EPR Paradox, Bell’s inequalities, and its significance By: Miles H. Taylor.
Bell’s Inequality.
Quantum Imaging MURI Kick-Off Meeting Rochester, June 9-10, Entangled state and thermal light - Foundamental and applications.
The Transactional Interpretation: an introduction ©2012 R. E. Kastner.
A1 “BASIC QUANTUM MECHANICS, AND SOME SURPRISING CONSEQUENCES” Anthony J. Leggett Department of Physics University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Basic Concepts Absolute Size The Superposition Principle Copyright – Michael D. Fayer, 2007 Size Classical MechanicsQuantum Mechanics RelativeAbsolute.
Atomic Theory Vocabulary, Models, and Scientists The Discovery of the Atom 440 B. C. to the present.
PHL 356 Philosophy of Physics Week XI EPR & the Bell results 1.
DPG 1 What is Realism in Physics? What is the Price for Maintaining It? A. J. Leggett Dept. of Physics University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 75 th.
PHL 356 Philosophy of Physics
Entangled Electrons.
Lecture XII Short lecture on Many Worlds & Decoherence
The Structure of a World Described by Quantum Mechanics
The Structure of a World Described by Quantum Mechanics A. J
Quantum mechanics from classical statistics
Schrödinger’s Rainbow:
Double Slit Experiment
“BASIC QUANTUM MECHANICS, AND SOME SURPRISING CONSEQUENCES”
Heisenberg Uncertainty
Astro notes Bause North Farmington High School
Quantum computation with classical bits
Presentation transcript:

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Wringing John Bell vocabulary the EPR paradox Bell’s theorem Bell’s assumptions what does it mean? Guy Blaylock Williams College 4/17/15

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Characteristics of a Garden Variety Classical Scientific Theory locality – actions at one location do not immediately have any effect at a separate location. (counter) factual definiteness – any measurable quality of a physical system has a single well-defined value when it is measured (factual) or before it is measured (counterfactual). determinism – complete knowledge of the current state of a physical system is sufficient to determine the future state of the system.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Characteristics of Orthodox QM Orthodox QM obeys none of these characteristics… When a wave function collapses, it collapses everywhere at once. (nonlocal) When a physical system is in a state of superposition, it is not in a single well-defined state. (indefinite) When a system collapses to a single final state among multiple possibilities of a superposition, it does so randomly. (indeterminate)

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 EPR à la Bohm (almost) Consider a pair of photons produced with the same polarization. Measure the polarization of one. The polarization of the other must always turn out to be the same (in QM this is the “ twin state ” ). 1. atoms 2. downconverters 3. subatomic decays/annihilation There are several sources that do this: down conversion crystal polaroid filter

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Quantum Twin State QM explains the EPR experiment using the quantum twin state: Prior to measurement, the two-photon system is not in one definite state; it’s in a superposition of V 1 V 2 and H 1 H 2. When a measurement is made, both photon polarizations collapse, nonlocally. The final choice, V 1 V 2 or H 1 H 2, is determined randomly.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 EPR logic If one can determine certain parameters (such as polarizations in Bohm’s EPR) without interfering with the system, those parameters must be‘real’. If a theory is to be considered complete, it should predict all real parameters, including the polarizations in Bohm’s EPR experiment. QM does not predict the polarizations.  QM is not complete! One could determine the polarization of photon 2 simply by looking at photon 1, without disturbing photon 2. Similarly, one could determine the polarization of photon 1 without disturbing it.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 EPR caveat Original statement of EPR “ No reasonable definition of reality could be expected to permit this. ” “…one would not arrive at our conclusion if … [the values of the second system] depend upon the process of measurement carried out on the first system”

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 newspapers Why can’t the photons just be generated with some definite polarization, like two newspapers sent to different places?

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Bell’s Theorem John S. Bell publishes “ ON THE EINSTEIN PODOLSKY ROSEN PARADOX ” Physics 1 (1964) p Reprinted in Speakable and Unspeakable in QM Exploring the correlations between different measurements leads to new constraints based on common sense (Bell inequalities). e.g. What if we measured polarizations at arbitrary angles  1,  2 ? QM makes predictions about the correlations of polarizations that are different from the predictions of ‘ common sense ’ theories!

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 QM prediction What is the probability of getting the same measurement (i.e. both transmitted or both absorbed)? Prob( M 1 (  1 ) = M 2 (  2 ) ) = cos 2 (  2 -  1 ) What should we expect from Quantum Mechanics? down conversion crystal 11 22

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Amplitude filtering For a wave impinging on a filter at an arbitrary angle…     Acos(      A …the amplitude that passes through is Acos (      The probability that a photon passes through is cos 2 (     .

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Common Sense What should we expect from Common Sense? This is where Bell comes in.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Arbitrary angle Prob( M 1 (  ) = M 2 (   ) ) = 0% coincidence For     between 0 and 90 o, the coincidence is between 100% and 0% In particular, let  be some angle such that Prob( M 1 (  ) = M 2 (  ) ) = 75% coincidence; mismatch 25% Prob( M 1 (  ) = M 2 (  ) ) is 100% coincidence A series of photon pairs will show a sequence of both being absorbed, or both transmitted, never one absorbed and one transmitted. F  :  F  :  ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 AAAAATATTTTTATATTATATATT ATTTATATAATAATTATATATTTT Common Sense Prediction      avg mismatch 25% F  :  F  :        avg mismatch 25%  F  :  F  :       avg mismatch  50% F  :  F  :  Apply this “ common sense ” to several different cases: Bell ’ s Inequality ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT ATTTATATAATAATTATATATTTT AAAAATATTTTTATATTATATATT ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 QM for 30/60 o For         QM says the coincidence should be: cos 2 (30 o + 30 o ) = cos 2 (60 o ) = 25% mismatch = 75%, certainly not less than 50% QM disagrees! For  = 30 o, coincidence is 75%, mismatch 25% (Remember cos 2 (30 o ) = 0.75)

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Experiment vindicates QM John Clauser (Berkeley) performs a Bell measurement using mercury vapor atoms that produce twin state photons. QM wins but the experiment does not rule out slower than light speed interactions Alain Aspect performs an experiment with extremely fast acousto-optical switches to demonstrate faster-than-light effects Nicolas Gisin uses Swiss telecom network optical fiber and a downconverter to demonstrate quantum effects over a distance of 7 miles. …and many more.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 AAAAATATTTTTATATTATATATT ATTTATATAATAATTATATATTTT Why is Bell ’ s inequality violated?      avg mismatch 25% F  :  F  :        avg mismatch 25%  F  :  F  :       avg mismatch  50% F  :  F  :  Why is Bell’s inequality violated? ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT ATTTATATAATAATTATATATTTT AAAAATATTTTTATATTATATATT ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT Assume that rotating F 2 from    to    does not affect what happens at F 1. locality!

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 … the other assumption 1.The two photons always yield the same polarization. easily verified by experiment 2.There exists an angle , such that mismatch = 25%. easily verified by experiment 3.The mismatch for      is the same as for      (i.e. rotational symmetry) easily verified by experiment 4.The mismatch rate between  and  is still 25% even when we don’t make the measurement for  Counterfactual definiteness (CFD). QM says there is more than one possibility for each measurement. The  sequence that disagrees with  by 25% is not the same as the  sequence that disagrees with  by 25%.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Common Sense Prediction      avg mismatch 25% F  :  F  :        avg mismatch 25%  F  :  F  :  ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT ATTTATATAATAATTATATATTTT AAAAATATTTTTATATTATATATT ATTAATATATTTATAAAATATTAT In QM the two sequences for    and    don’t need to be the same!

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 Conclusions The universe is nonlocal or non-CFD, or both. There are interpretations of QM that follow each. Whatever you decide, the world is

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 underlying realities Orthodox/Copenhagen - (Bohr, Heisenberg) non-CFD, non-deterministic & non-local Bohm’s interpretation - (Bell, Bohm, deBroglie) definite, deterministic & non-local Pilot waves direct the particles non-locally. Many Worlds - (DeWitt, Everett) local, deterministic & indefinite No collapse; every possibility exists as a part of the superposition. Agnostic - (many contemporary scientists) Who knows, who cares. Makes no sense to ask what is going on outside of observation.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 More on Definiteness CFD might seem to imply‘realism’. This is probably what EPR were trying to say with their ‘elements of reality’. The reverse is not true. Realism does not imply CFD. If one considered a photon wave function (which may be a superposition) to be real, it still would not imply a definite polarization. Definiteness does not imply determinism. The definite characteristic could evolve randomly. BTW, if a theory is local it must also be deterministic. (deduce from EPR expt.)

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15

History of the Worlds 1957 Hugh Everett writes a thesis on the “relative state” interpretation of QM [Hugh Everett III, “ Relative State ’ Formulation of Quantum Mechanics ”, Rev. Mod. Phys. 29, (1957)] The essence of Everett ’ s many worlds interpretation is the same as orthodox QM except that collapse does not happen. Superpositions persist. Bryce DeWitt popularizes, embellishes and somewhat misrepresents the concept in the “many worlds” interpretation [Bryce S. DeWitt, “Quantum mechanics and Reality”, Physics Today 23, (1970)] “… every quantum transition taking place on every star, in every galaxy, in every remote corner of the universe is splitting our local world on earth in myriads of copies of itself. ”

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 A wave that moves only in a plane is called plane-polarized or linearly polarized. polarizing filters A vertical filter allows a vertically polarized wave to pass, … but blocks a horizontally polarized wave,… and let ’ s the vertical part of a 45 o wave through. vertically polarized

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15 polarized photons Think of photon polarization as a binary quantity. A polarizer provides a way of measuring it. For light waves, the plane of oscillation defines the polarization. A photon ’ s polarization is determined by whether it does or does not pass through a polarizing filter. A photon that passes through a vertical filter is “ vertically polarized ”. …but it will not make it through a horizontal filter. It will pass through any number of other vertical filters.

Blaylock - Williams College 4/17/15