Parity proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem based on the 600-cell
Mordecai Waegell, P.K. Aravind, Norman D. Megill, Mladen Pavicic

TL;DR
This paper explores numerous basis-critical parity proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem derived from the 600-cell's vertices, revealing extensive, verifiable structures with potential for experimental disproofs of noncontextuality.
Contribution
It identifies and classifies a vast number of parity proofs based on the 600-cell, providing simple verification methods and demonstrating their applicability in experimental tests.
Findings
At least 90 basic proof types identified.
Nearly a hundred million proofs generated through symmetries.
Proofs are simple to verify and visualize.
Abstract
The set of 60 real rays in four dimensions derived from the vertices of a 600-cell is shown to possess numerous subsets of rays and bases that provide basis-critical parity proofs of the Bell-Kochen-Specker (BKS) theorem (a basis-critical proof is one that fails if even a single basis is deleted from it). The proofs vary considerably in size, with the smallest having 26 rays and 13 bases and the largest 60 rays and 41 bases. There are at least 90 basic types of proofs, with each coming in a number of geometrically distinct varieties. The replicas of all the proofs under the symmetries of the 600-cell yield a total of almost a hundred million parity proofs of the BKS theorem. The proofs are all very transparent and take no more than simple counting to verify. A few of the proofs are exhibited, both in tabular form as well as in the form of MMP hypergraphs that assist in their…
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