The Extended Wigner’s Friend concept experiment, which includes a quantum system accompanying an agent the one draws conclusions established the results of a measurement of a quantum state given in two nonorthogonal versions by another power, led allure designers to the conclusion that quantum theory cannot usually explain the use essentially. It has also happened suggested that this thought experiment is equivalent to involved state (Bell-type) experiments. This study indicates that the acceptance of the first Wigner's friend's exemption of choice, regarding how to equip a quantum state in individual of the two possible nonorthogonal versions, invalidates specific equivalence. A impossible theorem for superposed conduct is derived on this basis. It is again argued that posing Wigner-type experiments under the principle of neighborhood, i.e., using encircled containers designed as composite, many-body quantity states, is fundamentally wrong as it neglects quantum nonlocality.
Author(s) Details:
Szymon Łukaszyk,
Łukaszyk
Patent Attorneys, ul. Głowackiego 8, 40-052 Katowice, Poland.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/NFPSR-V3/article/view/8593
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