
Experiments in “Quantum Erasure” and “Delayed
... the same setup only they are more complicated in the ‘Test’ section. They use beam splitters and more crystals to combine paths after the Main screen so that both sets of results are obtained for the same photon. ...
... the same setup only they are more complicated in the ‘Test’ section. They use beam splitters and more crystals to combine paths after the Main screen so that both sets of results are obtained for the same photon. ...
Mathematical Aspects of Quantum Theory and Quantization Summer
... in physics at all. The growing publication pressure in academia leading to much ultra-specialization and short-term work is maybe another reason. Among the older generation of mathematicians there are still a few mathematicians for who physics is an essential part of their scientific interest, think ...
... in physics at all. The growing publication pressure in academia leading to much ultra-specialization and short-term work is maybe another reason. Among the older generation of mathematicians there are still a few mathematicians for who physics is an essential part of their scientific interest, think ...
Pure Wave Mechanics and the Very Idea of Empirical Adequacy
... can ever be settled by such a measurement. Furthermore this result is independent of the size of the apparatus, and remains true for apparatus of quite macroscopic dimensions. . . . This behavior seems to be quite at variance with our observations, since macroscopic objects always appear to us to ha ...
... can ever be settled by such a measurement. Furthermore this result is independent of the size of the apparatus, and remains true for apparatus of quite macroscopic dimensions. . . . This behavior seems to be quite at variance with our observations, since macroscopic objects always appear to us to ha ...
Time reversal and the symplectic symmetry of the electron spin.
... and superconductivity. For example, the inversion of spins under time reversal is central to the formation of singlet pairs, formed through the combination of a spin with its time reversed twin. In the SU(N) group, for N > 2, the loss of this symmetry means there there is no way to form singlet pair ...
... and superconductivity. For example, the inversion of spins under time reversal is central to the formation of singlet pairs, formed through the combination of a spin with its time reversed twin. In the SU(N) group, for N > 2, the loss of this symmetry means there there is no way to form singlet pair ...
Isotropic restriction in Group Field Theory condensates
... In the beginning of the twentieth century, quantum mechanics and general relativity (GR) have deeply modified our conceptual representation of some key notions such as space, time, causality and matter. The two theories have been applied with solid experimental success and are now well established. ...
... In the beginning of the twentieth century, quantum mechanics and general relativity (GR) have deeply modified our conceptual representation of some key notions such as space, time, causality and matter. The two theories have been applied with solid experimental success and are now well established. ...
Black Stars, Not Holes
... which alters the quantum fields’ zero-point en ergy density, which means the zero-point energy is no longer exactly canceled. The excess amount is said to be caused by vacuum polarization, by analogy with the effect of an electric charge po larizing a medium [see box on next page]. We have describ ...
... which alters the quantum fields’ zero-point en ergy density, which means the zero-point energy is no longer exactly canceled. The excess amount is said to be caused by vacuum polarization, by analogy with the effect of an electric charge po larizing a medium [see box on next page]. We have describ ...