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This is the only section with substantial mathematics. It is not essential. One can understand the idea of Bell's result from the previous section. However it is worth making the effort to follow if you are at all inclined to do so.
Bell's proof that no hidden variables model will work involves some simple integral equations. We repeat the treatment with additional commentary from Appendix 2 of Bell's article "Bertlmann's socks and the nature of reality"[6]. The commentary is intended to make the argument understandable even for those allergic to mathematical notation.
For the general case we need two adjustments
and
and two observations
and
as shown in Figure 6.5.
We assume there is some unknown set of hidden variables that we represent by a single
parameter
. The assumption of locality is that we can factor the joint
probability into two independent local probabilities. The joint probability of
getting detections
and
with experimental settings
and
is
. The locality assumptions is given by the following.
This implies that the probability of a detection at
is only dependent on the local
setting of
and a local unknown variable
. The same is true at the other
detector. We can remove
from the left hand side by integrating or averaging
over all possible values of
. To do this we need the probability
density function
that gives the likelihood that
will have
a particular value.
This says that the joint probability of observing
and
at settings
and
is the average value of a product
of three terms. The first two are the likelihood of making observations
and
locally for
a given value of
. The third
is
the likelihood that
will have this value.
Practical experiments detect or fail to detect a particle.
Thus we can replace outcomes
with the four possible detection
combinations of
,
,
and
representing a detection
or no detection at the two distant sensors. The following sum of these possible
outcomes is particularly useful in developing a version of Bell's inequality
that can be tested experimentally.
So instead of computing the probability of possible outcomes
we
will be computing the probability that
will have a given value.
is not a probability and will be negative if it is more likely that
we get detections in only one of the two sensors rather than in both
or neither.
We can write
as a function of local variables using Equation 6.2.
The idea is to replace the nonlocal dependency in
with dependency
only on local values (only
or only
) and the hidden local variable
. This results in the following.
We can factor the part of 6.4 involving
and
as follows.
We can rewrite 6.5 as follows.
By making the following substitutions.
Now we use 6.6 to construct a formula for
. The
symbol `
' is used as a shorthand for two equations. The first uses
and the
second
. You have to make the substitution every place
occurs. Shortly
we will use
which substitutes the signs in the reverse order. For example
represents the two equations
and
.
Since
and
are probabilities the following holds.
Thus
and
.
For these are both differences between two numbers between 0 and 1 and thus their absolute
value must be less than or equal one. Using this can remove
from 6.7 by converting the equality to an inequality. It is convenient
to do generate two versions of the result.
Using 6.8 we have the following.
Since
is a probability density we have the following.
Now using 6.11 and 6.10 we have the following from 6.9.
This is called the CHSH inequality from the initials of the authors who first derived it[9] as an inequality that could be tested experimentally.
For the experiment involving magnetic spin in Section 6.4
provides a good example
of how this inequality is violated. Quantum mechanics predicts that that
where
and
are the angles of orientation of
the two polarizers. Thus we have from 6.12 the following.
Assume
,
and
.
Figure 6.6 gives a plot of 6.12 as a
function of
. It also plots the
classical limit of 2. The peak occurs at
where the value
for CHSH predicted by quantum mechanics is
.
The horizontal straight line at 2 represents the maximum correlation from local hidden variables theories. The curve is the prediction of quantum mechanics. |
Completed second draft of this book
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Next: Experimental tests of Bell's
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