Interferometry with independent Bose-Einstein ondensates: parity as an EPR/Bell quantum variable
Franck Lalo\"e (LKB - Lhomond), William Mullin (UMASS)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that independent Bose-Einstein condensates can produce strong quantum correlations violating Bell inequalities, even with large particle numbers, through interferometric measurements and parity analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a method to observe Bell inequality violations using independent BECs and interferometry, scalable to large systems, with detailed experimental considerations.
Findings
Bell violations persist with increasing particle number
Detection of all particles is essential for observing quantum correlations
Proposed schemes extend GHZ and Hardy tests to large N
Abstract
When independent Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC), described quantum mechanically by Fock (number) states, are sent into interferometers, the measurement of the output port at which the particles are detected provides a binary measurement, with two possible results . With two interferometers and two BEC's, the parity (product of all results obtained at each interferometer) has all the features of an Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen quantity, with perfect correlations predicted by quantum mechanics when the settings (phase shifts of the interferometers) are the same. When they are different, significant violations of Bell inequalities are obtained. These violations do not tend to zero when the number of particles increases, and can therefore be obtained with arbitrarily large systems, but a condition is that all particles should be detected. We discuss the general experimental…
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