The origin of quantum nonlocality
Fang-Yu Hong

TL;DR
This paper proposes that quantum nonlocality arises from interactions with a shadowed quantum vacuum, explaining entanglement and wave-particle duality through vacuum interactions and offering a new interpretation of quantum phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a novel interpretation that quantum objects are composites of particles and shadowed quantum vacuum states, providing a unified explanation for nonlocality and wave duality.
Findings
Quantum entanglement explained via vacuum shadows
Quantum teleportation and collapse interpreted through vacuum interactions
Wave-particle duality attributed to particle-vacuum composite
Abstract
Quantum entanglement is the quintessential characteristic of quantum mechanics and the basis for quantum information processing. When one of two maximally entangled particles is measured, without measurement the state of another one is determined simultaneously no matter how far the two particles is from each other. How can these phenomena take place since no object can move faster than light speed in a vacuum? The key problem is due to the ignorance of the interaction between a particle and a quantum vacuum. Just like the case where a gun suffers recoil from its firing of a bullet, when a particle is created from the quantum vacuum, the vacuum will be somewhat "broken" correspondingly, which can be described by a shadow state in the vacuum. Through their shadows in the vacuum two quantum entangled particles can have a distance-independent instantaneous interaction with each other.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Biofield Effects and Biophysics
