A Macroscopic Classical System with Entanglement
D.W. Snoke

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a classical macroscopic system that mimics quantum entanglement and can violate Bell's inequalities, providing insights into the nonclassical nature of quantum phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a classical system with a mathematical structure identical to quantum systems, capable of simulating entanglement and Bell inequality violations.
Findings
Classical system can replicate quantum entanglement
System can violate Bell's inequalities
Provides visualization of entanglement
Abstract
It is possible to construct a classical, macroscopic system which has a mathematical structure that is exactly the same as that of a quantum mechanical system and which can be put into a state which is identical to quantum mechanical entanglement. This paper presents a simple example, including a way in which the system can be measured to violate Bell's inequalities. This classical simulation of a quantum system allows us to visualize entanglement and also helps us to see what aspects of quantum mechanical systems are truly nonclassical.
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Systems and Time Series Analysis
