Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons?
In 1964 the physicists John St. Bell working at CERN took the 1935-idea of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen seriously and found that all theories based on local realism have to satisfy a certain inequality, nowadays dubbed Bell’s inequality. Experiments with ordinary matter systems or light show violations...
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doaj-077be851fcb6481297b9a13a713a5eda2021-08-02T03:40:51ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2014-01-01810101210.1051/epjconf/20148101012epjconf_meson2014_01012Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons?Hiesmayr Beatrix C.0University of Vienna, Faculty of Physics In 1964 the physicists John St. Bell working at CERN took the 1935-idea of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen seriously and found that all theories based on local realism have to satisfy a certain inequality, nowadays dubbed Bell’s inequality. Experiments with ordinary matter systems or light show violations of Bell’s inequality favouring the quantum theory though a loophole free experiment has not yet been performed. This contribution presents an experimentally feasible Bell inequality for systems at higher energy scales, i.e. entangled neutral Ҡ -meson pairs that are typically produced in Φ -mesons decays or proton-antiproton annihilation processes. Strong requirements have to be overcome in order to achieve a conclusive tests, such a proposal was recently published. Surprisingly, this new Bell inequality reveals new features for weakly decaying particles, in particular, a strong sensitivity to the combined charge-conjugation-parity (CP) symmetry. Here-with, a puzzling relation between a symmetry breaking for mesons and Bell’s inequality—which is a necessary and sufficient condition for the security of quantum cryptography protocols— is established. This becomes the more important since CP symmetry is related to the cosmological question why the antimatter disappeared after the Big Bang. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20148101012 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hiesmayr Beatrix C. |
spellingShingle |
Hiesmayr Beatrix C. Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons? EPJ Web of Conferences |
author_facet |
Hiesmayr Beatrix C. |
author_sort |
Hiesmayr Beatrix C. |
title |
Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons? |
title_short |
Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons? |
title_full |
Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons? |
title_fullStr |
Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for Ҡ -mesons? |
title_sort |
can strong correlations be experimentally revealed for ҡ -mesons? |
publisher |
EDP Sciences |
series |
EPJ Web of Conferences |
issn |
2100-014X |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
In 1964 the physicists John St. Bell working at CERN took the 1935-idea of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen seriously and found that all theories based on local realism have to satisfy a certain inequality, nowadays dubbed Bell’s inequality. Experiments with ordinary matter systems or light show violations of Bell’s inequality favouring the quantum theory though a loophole free experiment has not yet been performed. This contribution presents an experimentally feasible Bell inequality for systems at higher energy scales, i.e. entangled neutral Ҡ -meson pairs that are typically produced in Φ -mesons decays or proton-antiproton annihilation processes. Strong requirements have to be overcome in order to achieve a conclusive tests, such a proposal was recently published. Surprisingly, this new Bell inequality reveals new features for weakly decaying particles, in particular, a strong sensitivity to the combined charge-conjugation-parity (CP) symmetry. Here-with, a puzzling relation between a symmetry breaking for mesons and Bell’s inequality—which is a necessary and sufficient condition for the security of quantum cryptography protocols— is established. This becomes the more important since CP symmetry is related to the cosmological question why the antimatter disappeared after the Big Bang.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20148101012 |
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