Contextuality Analysis of the Double Slit Experiment (With a Glimpse Into Three Slits)
Ehtibar N. Dzhafarov, Janne V. Kujala

TL;DR
This paper applies the Contextuality-by-Default theory to analyze the double-slit experiment, demonstrating its noncontextual nature within classical probability, and explores the complexities introduced when extending to three slits.
Contribution
It provides a novel contextuality analysis of the double-slit experiment using a classical probability framework and examines the challenges of extending this analysis to three slits.
Findings
Double-slit system is always noncontextual.
Context-dependence explained by direct influences of slit arrangements.
Triple-slit system can be either contextual or noncontextual.
Abstract
The Contextuality-by-Default theory is illustrated on contextuality analysis of the idealized double-slit experiment. The experiment is described by a system of contextually labeled binary random variables each of which answers the question: has the particle hit the detector, having passed through a given slit (left or right) in a given state (open or closed)? This system of random variables is a cyclic system of rank 4, formally the same as the system describing the EPR/Bell paradigm with signaling. Unlike the latter, however, the system describing the double-slit experiment is always noncontextual, i.e., the context-dependence in it is entirely explainable in terms of direct influences of contexts (closed-open arrangements of the slits) upon the marginal distributions of the random variables involved. The analysis presented is entirely within the framework of abstract classical…
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