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      Significant-loophole-free test of Bell's theorem with entangled photons

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          Abstract

          Local realism is the worldview in which physical properties of objects exist independently of measurement and where physical influences cannot travel faster than the speed of light. Bell's theorem states that this worldview is incompatible with the predictions of quantum mechanics, as is expressed in Bell's inequalities. Previous experiments convincingly supported the quantum predictions. Yet, every experiment requires assumptions that provide loopholes for a local realist explanation. Here we report a Bell test that closes the most significant of these loopholes simultaneously. Using a well-optimized source of entangled photons, rapid setting generation, and highly efficient superconducting detectors, we observe a violation of a Bell inequality with high statistical significance. The purely statistical probability of our results to occur under local realism does not exceed \(3.74 \times 10^{-31}\), corresponding to an 11.5 standard deviation effect.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2015-11-10
          2015-12-20
          Article
          10.1103/PhysRevLett.115.250401
          1511.03190
          7d8cc7bd-d914-4546-a731-e63c4f2f627d

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 250401 (2015)
          Supplementary Material is available as an arXiv ancillary file. Experimental data available on request--please contact the corresponding authors
          quant-ph

          Quantum physics & Field theory
          Quantum physics & Field theory

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