Results of the Baikal experiment on observations of macroscopic nonlocal correlations in reverse time
S. M. Korotaev, V. O. Serdyuk, E. O. Kiktenko, N. M. Budnev, J. V., Gorohov

TL;DR
This study reports on the Baikal experiment observing macroscopic nonlocal correlations in reverse time, revealing potential for earthquake forecasting and advancing understanding of nonlocal quantum phenomena at large scales.
Contribution
The paper presents new experimental evidence of reverse-time nonlocal correlations in macroscopic systems, confirmed over two years, with implications for earthquake prediction.
Findings
Nonlocal correlations respond to heliogeophysical processes.
Correlations are strongest at low frequencies (months scale).
Detected signals show response to earthquakes, suggesting new forecasting methods.
Abstract
Although the general theory macroscopic quantum entanglement of is still in its infancy, consideration of the matter in the framework of action-at-a distance electrodynamics predicts for the random dissipative processes observability of the advanced nonlocal correlations. These correlations were really revealed in our previous experiments with some large-scale heliogeophysical processes as the source ones and the lab detectors as the probe ones. Recently a new experiment has been performing on the base of Baikal Deep Water Neutrino Observatory. The thick water layer is an excellent shield against any local impacts on the detectors. The first annual series 2012/2013 has demonstrated that detector signals respond to the heliogeophysical processes and causal connection of the signals directed downwards: from the Earth surface to the Baikal floor. But this nonlocal connection proved to be…
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