Postponing the Past: An Operational Analysis of Delayed-Choice Experiments

2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Bahrami ◽  
A. Shafiee
Author(s):  
Hervé ZWIRN

In a recent paper [1], I argued against backward in time effects used by several authors to explain delayed choice experiments. I gave an explanation showing that there is no physical influence propagating from the present to the past and modifying the state of the system at a time previous to the measurement. However, though the solution is straightforward in the case of delayed choice experiments involving only one particle, it is subtler in the case of experiments involving two entangled particles because they give rise to EPR-like situations. Considering that a measurement is not an actual change of the physical state of a system and is relative to the observer allows to understand that there is neither backward in time effects nor instantaneous collapse of the second system when the first one is measured, as is often postulated. This allows also to get rid of any non-locality [2]. In this paper, I want to go further into the consequences of this way of considering the measurement, that I have called Convivial Solipsism, and show that even if, in the usual sense, there is no physical effect of the present or of the future on the past, we must nevertheless consider that the observer’s past is sometimes not entirely determined and that it becomes determined only when certain measurements are done latter. This apparent contradiction disappears if one understand that each observer builds, through her own measurements, her own world (that I call the phenomenal world in Convivial Solipsism) which is different from what we are used to consider as the common world shared by everybody.


Physica B+C ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 137 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 266-269
Author(s):  
Herbert J. Bernstein

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 1250-1259
Author(s):  
G.G. Absatirov ◽  

The materials of the article are devoted to a highly topical issue - epizootological and epidemic manifestations of brucellosis and trends in their development in the modern period in the Republic of Kazakhstan. Despite the measures taken by the Government, the epizootic situation and the problem of eliminating brucellosis over the past 20 years continues to be tense and remains relevant for the Ministry of Agriculture and the Ministry of Health. Over the years of independence in the republic, several state programs to fight and prevent brucellosis have been developed and approved in the format of the Rules for the fight and prevention of the disease. On the basis of a retrospective and operational analysis of state programs for controlling and preventing brucellosis, using serological and factor monitoring, as well as monitoring the immunological status, as well as organization and implementation of antiepizootic measures, an analysis of the above measures is presented, the risks and causes of the onset and spread of the disease are indicated on the territory of the regions. The factors influencing the epizootic process of brucellosis, systemic deficiencies in the organization and implementation of antiepizootic measures aimed at the links of the epizootic chain, the mechanism of isolating the source of infection and its neutralization are shown. Based on the results of the study, measures are proposed to correct the diagnosis and specific prevention of brucellosis, as well as the need for effective coordination in organizing and conducting anti-brucellosis measures.


1995 ◽  
Vol 52 (6) ◽  
pp. 4984-4985 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Aharonov ◽  
S. Popescu ◽  
L. Vaidman

1986 ◽  
Vol 480 (1 New Technique) ◽  
pp. 108-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. HELLMUTH ◽  
ARTHUR G. ZAJONC ◽  
H. WALTHER

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (10) ◽  
pp. 1031
Author(s):  
Terry Bollinger

As indicated by the name "quantum erasure," the most common interpretation of certain classes of delayed choice quantum experiments is that they, in some fashion, erase or undo past decisions. Unfortunately, this interpretation cannot be correct since the past decisions were already classically and irreversibly captured as recorded information or datums. A datum is information that, through temporal entanglement, constrains future events. The correct interpretation of such experiments is stranger than erasure: Recordings made early in such quantum experiments predestine choices made later through arbitrarily complex and often human-scale classical choices. Since this process of quantum predestination occurs only within the future light cone of datum creation, another (possibly) less radical way to interpret such experiments is that time is multiscale, granular, and impossible to define outside of the quantum state of the entities involved. The continuum time abstraction is not compatible with this view.


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