Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Bell test experiments explained

Eight physicists have written an excellent new paper explaining quantum mechanics from the viewpoint of the Bell test experiments:
Understanding quantum physics through simple experiments: from wave-particle duality to Bell's theorem

Quantum physics, which describes the strange behavior of light and matter at the smallest scales, is one of the most successful descriptions of reality, yet it is notoriously inaccessible. Here we provide an approachable explanation of quantum physics using simple thought experiments that deal with one- and two-particle interference. We derive all relevant quantum predictions using minimal mathematics, without introducing the advanced calculations that are typically used to describe quantum physics. We focus on the two key surprises of quantum physics, namely wave-particle duality, which deals with the counter-intuitive behavior of single quantum particles, and entanglement, which applies to two or more quantum particles and brings out the inherent contradiction between quantum physics and seemingly obvious assumptions regarding the nature of reality. We employ Hardy's version of Bell's theorem to show that so-called local hidden variables are inadequate at explaining the behavior of entangled quantum particles. This means that one either has to give up on hidden variables, i.e. the idea that the outcomes of measurements on quantum particles are determined before an experiment is actually carried out, or one has to relinquish the principle of locality, which requires that no causal influences should be faster than the speed of light. Finally, we describe how these remarkable predictions of quantum physics have been confirmed in experiments. We have successfully used the present approach in a course that is open to all undergraduate students at the University of Calgary, without any prerequisites in mathematics or physics.
It concludes:

Bell's theorem indicates a deep contradiction between quantum physics and EPR's seemingly obvious assumptions about reality. Surprisingly, experiments demonstrate quantum physics to be correct and rule out the intuitively appealing possibility of local hidden variables. This implies that measurement outcomes are either not predetermined at all, or they are determined by nonlocal hidden variables, such as Bohm's pilot wave model.
My only quibble with this is that it is a sloppy about the alternatives to hidden variables.

Yes, experiments have ruled out local hidden variables. Nnonlocal hidden variables are possible but foolish; who wants a theory where inaccessible variable have magical effects at a distance? Such theories are useless and misleading.

This leaves us to conclude, according to the paper, "that measurement outcomes are either not predetermined at all". In other words, it says, we must reject "the idea that the outcomes of measurements on quantum particles are determined before an experiment is actually carried out".

There are actually two possibilities here. One is that photons, and other quantum objects, have a free will of their own where they can decide what properties they will have, within the range of possibilities. That is, the physics is not determinist.

The other possibility is that the outcomes are all predetermined in some physical sense, but not as mathematical variables like real numbers.

Suppose you fire a photon at a screen, thru a double slit. Maybe its path is determined once it passes the double slit. Maybe it is determined even before the slit. Maybe the photon is still deciding what it wants to be right up to the point that it hits the screen. Our experiments cannot really distinguish between this possibilities.

What we can say is that you cannot model the photon by introducing some non-measured variables like which slit the photon is passing thru. It doesn't work. The experiments show that.

My view is that we do measurements with real numbers because that is the only way we know how to make observations. But there is no reason to believe that a photon can be fully described by real numbers. Photons are strange objects. So are real numbers. But they are not the same.

If you have a single electron, then it appears that you can describe it by a wave function okay. The above paper does a good job of explaining this. But with two particles, they can be entangled. Then wave functions can still predict experiments, according to quantum mechanics, but they don't truly match what appears to be the photon internal structure. After all, photons appear to behave locally, but the wave functions seem somewhat nonlocal in the case of an entangled measurement.

Quantum mechanics is s positivist theory. It predicts experiments, and if that is all you require, then it is a complete theory. But if you think that you are representing the true internals of a photon with wave functions, forget it. It cannot be done. The wave functions are just tools for predicting experiments. The photons could be sentient beings with their own free will and God-given souls, for all we know, as long as they are constrained to obey quantum mechanics.

There are a lot of papers on Bell's theorem that make strong conclusions because of faulty assumptions about reality. The above paper does an excellent job of explaining the experiments that must be accepted. The experiments are not really that strange, as they do not show nonlocality or pilot waves or anything that bizarre. Quantum mechanics is not really so strange, if you let go of your preconceptions about how photons can be modeled.

Note: Quantum field theory teaches that photons are not really fundamental, and discussions about photons like the above are convenient simplifications of fields.

5 comments:

  1. Would you say that this wiki page is wrong:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_nonlocality

    Would you be interested in correcting it?

    ReplyDelete
  2. You write, "Note: Quantum field theory teaches that photons are not really fundamental, and discussions about photons like the above are convenient simplifications of fields."

    Can the photoelectric effect be described with quantum mechanics?

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  3. Roger, your comments are kind of misleading merely on the face of them. For instance, simply saying that the particles are not predetermined would make one think this would outlaw some correlation at a distance. This is very smog wording.

    Furthermore, the rejection of determinism is an incoherent position because it's by definition not a physical explanation. If you don't believe in determinism, you are really saying you don't believe in physics describing nature. Evoking randomness is strictly circular reasoning from a law point of view. Mysticism is fine but it isn't physics and we should be more interested in a provable limit to physics to say anything meaningful at all.

    You say: "My view is that we do measurements with real numbers because that is the only way we know how to make observations. But there is no reason to believe that a photon can be fully described by real numbers. Photons are strange objects. So are real numbers. But they are not the same."

    Then what do you think of Joy Christian? He is still publishing papers and simulations and getting into heated arguments.

    Quantum correlations are weaved by the spinors of the Euclidean primitives
    http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/5/5/180526

    Disproofs of disproofs of disproofs of disproofs...
    https://fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/1247

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  4. There are all kinds of interesting arguments floating around about the generality of Bell's theorem. I don't think anti-realist are clear about what they mean.

    "Quantum theory teaches us that outcomes of measurements are only created as the effect of a physical interaction of the measured system with the measuring instrument in a well defined experimental context. Therefore a hidden variable model which aims to explain details of quantum measurements has to introduce context-dependent hidden variables, in particular supplementary parameters describing measuring instruments during the measurement. It is well known that if such contextual hidden variables are correctly introduced, Bell-type inequalities can not be proven."
    https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.05021

    "We construct a simple probabilistic model allowing these correlations to be explained in a locally causal way. In our model, measurement outcomes are neither predetermined nor produced in an irreducibly random way. We explain why, contrary to the general belief, the introduction of setting-dependent parameters does not restrict experimenters' freedom of choice. Since the violation of Bell-type inequalities does not allow the conclusion that Nature is non-local and that quantum theory is complete, the Bohr–Einstein quantum debate may not be closed."
    http://rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/375/2106/20160392

    "The representation of a hypothetical formulation of quantum physics is a task which requires careful attention to the quantum formalism and its rules. The major flaw in the “no-hidden-variables proofs” is that they neglect the detailed structure of the quantum measurement procedures. Von Neumann’s argument failed in a somewhat trivial way, as it disregards the fundamental directive that incompatible observables cannot be measured simultaneously. Both Gleason’s, as well as Kochen and Specker’s theorem, may seem at first to succeed where von Neumann failed, i.e., to prove the impossibility of hidden variables. Nevertheless, as Bell has shown [17, 18], these theorems also fail as arguments against hidden variables, since they do not account for contextuality."
    (Bell’s Theorem and Quantum Realism, Hemmick, 2012)

    "realism and locality are compatible with correlations that lie outside the class of Bell-type correlations. They are inner-product-type correlations, having thus the same mathematical structure as the well known Pearson correlations of classical statistics."
    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-14956-y

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Consistent histories is also quite interesting.
      http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Bell's_theorem#Consistent_histories

      Delete