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Journal ArticleDOI

Is quantum mechanics with CP nonconservation incompatible with Einstein's locality condition at the statistical level?

TLDR
In this paper, a general analysis of the EPR-type gedanken situation (in the presence of CP noninvariance) involving basis states which are mutually non-orthogonal but partially distinguishable is presented.
About
This article is published in Physics Letters A.The article was published on 1988-07-11. It has received 19 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Einstein.

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Citations
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Testing quantum mechanics in the neutral kaon system at a φ-factory

TL;DR: In this paper, the possibility of performing a Bell-type test of quantum mechanics in the neutral kaon system at a φ-factory is discussed, and a Bell inequality can be formulated for this system using a formalism based on a kaon quasispin picture and taking into account CP violation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bell inequalities for K-0(K)over-bar(0) pairs from Phi-resonance decays

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the premises of recent propositions to test local realism via the Bell inequalities using neutral kaons from the resonance decays as entangled Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen pairs and propose a different kind of Bell inequality in which the free choice or adjustability of the experimental setup is guaranteed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum asymmetry between time and space

TL;DR: It is shown, using a sum-over-paths formalism, that a violation of time reversal (T) symmetry might be such a cause of an asymmetry between time and space, and that T violation may have a deep connection with time evolution.
References
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Book

Quantum Mechanics

Book

Quantum mechanics

The Physical Principles of Quantum Theory

TL;DR: It was in fact he who first saw clearly that in the older forms of quantum theory we were describing our spectra in terms of atomic mechanisms regarding which we could gain no definite knowledge, and who first found a way to interpret (or at least describe) spectroscopic phenomena without assuming the existence of such atomic mechanisms.
Book

The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory

TL;DR: It was in fact he who first saw clearly that in the older forms of quantum theory we were describing our spectra in terms of atomic mechanisms regarding which we could gain no definite knowledge, and who first found a way to interpret (or at least describe) spectroscopic phenomena without assuming the existence of such atomic mechanisms as mentioned in this paper.
Related Papers (5)