Authors
Daniel Salart, Augustin Baas, Cyril Branciard, Nicolas Gisin, Hugo Zbinden
Publication date
2008/8/14
Journal
Nature
Volume
454
Issue
7206
Pages
861-864
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Correlations are generally described by one of two mechanisms: either a first event influences a second one by sending information encoded in bosons or other physical carriers, or the correlated events have some common causes in their shared history. Quantum physics predicts an entirely different kind of cause for some correlations, named entanglement. This reveals itself in correlations that violate Bell inequalities (implying that they cannot be described by common causes) between space-like separated events (implying that they cannot be described by classical communication). Many Bell tests have been performed, and loopholes related to locality,, and detection, have been closed in several independent experiments. It is still possible that a first event could influence a second, but the speed of this hypothetical influence (Einstein’s ‘spooky action at a distance’) would need to be defined in some universal …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Salart, A Baas, C Branciard, N Gisin, H Zbinden - Nature, 2008