Let
Let
Suppose (A, B) is statistically independent of
Define
In other words,
Define
Theorem:
Proof:
Hence
But
In the same way,
QED
Fred, this is the maths part of the forum. I told you some mathematical facts. Do you agree with them?FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 5:13 am @gill1109 What the heck is this? A proof of the CHSH inequality? That is NOT what I asked for.
Please demonstrate how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality.
Please demonstrate MATHEMATICALLY how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality while using the CHSH inequality.gill1109 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:27 am... How do experiments exceed the bounds? Well, they collect data, and they calculate the obvious estimates of those four correlations, and they saw that they were bigger than 2. In Delft they observed about 2.4. In Munich about 2.6. In Vienna and at NIST about 2.0001. ...FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 5:13 am @gill1109 What the heck is this? A proof of the CHSH inequality? That is NOT what I asked for.
Please demonstrate how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality.
Richard, your theorem is superfluous. The bounds have nothing to do with probability theory. The first two statements are sufficient to derive the bounds. There is no need for any consideration of probability distributions, or any other physical notions. It is a tautology of mathematics. In fact, you are aware that I've shown this very theorem a long time ago. Here it is again, with all the nonsense removed:gill1109 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 12:57 am This little theorem appears in many publications.
Letbe four random variables taking the values +/-1
Letbe two random variables taking the values 1, 2
Suppose (A, B) is statistically independent of
Defineand
In other words,if
,
if
;
if
,
if
Define
Theorem:lies between -2 and +2
Proof:
can only take the values +/-2
Hence
lies between -2 and +2
Butby statistical independence of
from
. because
when
In the same way,for all
QED
Dear Michel,minkwe wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 5:00 pm Richard, your theorem is superfluous. The bounds have nothing to do with probability theory. The first two statements are sufficient to derive the bounds. There is no need for any consideration of probability distributions, or any other physical notions. It is a tautology of mathematics. In fact, you are aware that I've shown this very theorem a long time ago. Here it is again, with all the nonsense removed:
Given four numbersthe consider the expression
since they terms can only take values, it follows that when
is 0, then necessarily,
and vice versa. Therefore, at extrema, one of the terms will be zero and the other will either be +2 or -2. Therefore
Given any sequence of such four numbers, of any length N, it follows that:
Therefore
This upper bound applies to for any length of the spreadsheet but you can see easily that as, we have
There is no need to invoke any concept of locality, or realism to derive these limits and these limits.
and then:Please demonstrate MATHEMATICALLY how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality while using the CHSH inequality.
I can’t do what you said because I don’t understand what you mean.FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 12:50 pm @gill1109 Yeah, didn't think you could do it since it is IMPOSSIBLE!
At least you admit that Bell's inequalities have no interest to physics or computer science. My point was that the first two statements determine the limit and nothing else that you state about probability theory matters to obtain the derived limits. You can dress them up with "probability theory" but it's all the same proof. All the garbage is superfluous subterfuge.gill1109 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:54 pm Actually, I don’t see that what you prove has much interest, whether to physics or to computer science, but in this part of the forum we talk about mathematics.
I wrote out a little theorem and its simple proof in elementary probability theory. Discrete random variables, probabilities and conditional probabilities, expectation value, conditional expectation.
FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 12:50 pm The experiments violate the inequality by collecting data, an N x 4 spreadsheet with columns called A, B filled with 1’s and 2’s and columns called X, Y filled with +/-1’s. They then spit this into 4 subsets of rows corresponding to four values of (a, b). They then average x times y for each of the four subsets.
Richard, you've been away from England so much you are starting to fail to understand basic English: Kansrekening is niet nodig. Therefore any discordance with the derived bounds points to an error in the application of the derived inequality. Nobody here denies the validity of Bell's inequalities. Perhaps one day you will stop barking at the moon about the validity of Bell's inequalities. You need a new game, the old one is boring.gill1109 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:54 pm My theorem concerns the conditional expectations E(XY | A = a, B = b), you do not even mention them.
Would you like me to write out the standard elementary probability theory definition of E(XY | A = a, B = b)?
Would you like me to explain the relevance of my theorem in the mathematics of computer science - distributed computing?
Michelminkwe wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 4:53 am At least you admit that Bell's inequalities have no interest to physics or computer science. My point was that the first two statements determine the limit and nothing else that you state about probability theory matters to obtain the derived limits. You can dress them up with "probability theory" but it's all the same proof. All the garbage is superfluous subterfuge.
Richard, you've been away from England so much you are starting to fail to understand basic English: Kansrekening is niet nodig. Therefore any discordance with the derived bounds points to an error in the application of the derived inequality. Nobody here denies the validity of Bell's inequalities. Perhaps one day you will stop barking at the moon about the validity of Bell's inequalities. You need a new game, the old one is boring.gill1109 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 08, 2021 6:54 pm My theorem concerns the conditional expectations E(XY | A = a, B = b), you do not even mention them.
Would you like me to write out the standard elementary probability theory definition of E(XY | A = a, B = b)?
Would you like me to explain the relevance of my theorem in the mathematics of computer science - distributed computing?
No. First of all, I want to establish agreement on the inequality which I derived. It is not what you think it is. It's a true mathematical result. It is not what you think of as the CHSH inequality.FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:51 am @gill1109
Please demonstrate MATHEMATICALLY how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality while using the CHSH inequality.
We will start with (4). The simulation NEVER EVER "violates" the inequality. Maybe some day you will get your head strapped on straight.gill1109 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:58 amNo. First of all, I want to establish agreement on the inequality which I derived. It is not what you think it is. It's a true mathematical result. It is not what you think of as the CHSH inequality.FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:51 am @gill1109
Please demonstrate MATHEMATICALLY how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality while using the CHSH inequality.
By the way,
(1) I don't think anyone should "use" it in the way you seem to mean by that word
(2) I can't explain how QM violates it
(3) It is trivial to understand how data might violate it
(4) The conclusion of my theorem need not hold if its assumptions do not hold. That explains why your simulation, Fred, does violate the inequality.
Perhaps some explanation would be helpful here. For some strange reason, Gill seems to believe the simulation has something to do with some inequalities. Probably because we are somewhat following Bell's prescriptions for the A and B local functions. But those prescription are simply what you must do to construct local functions whether they be for QM or something more classical. Nothing really to do with the inequalities though Bell might have used them for such purpose.FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 8:58 am We will start with (4). The simulation NEVER EVER "violates" the inequality. Maybe someday you will get your head strapped on straight.
This is the math section of the forum. I derived a math theorem. In itself, it is a theorem about random variables and probability distributions and about conditional distributions. It is not “about” anything in physics or anything in computer science. It does have a connection to the mathematical ingredients in Bell’s arguments. That seems to confuse Fred.FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Fri Nov 12, 2021 9:28 pmPerhaps some explanation would be helpful here. For some strange reason, Gill seems to believe the simulation has something to do with some inequalities. Probably because we are somewhat following Bell's prescriptions for the A and B local functions. But those prescription are simply what you must do to construct local functions whether they be for QM or something more classical. Nothing really to do with the inequalities though Bell might have used them for such purpose.FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 8:58 am We will start with (4). The simulation NEVER EVER "violates" the inequality. Maybe someday you will get your head strapped on straight.
Double LOL! In your dreams you actually think they are math theorems when in fact they are junk math theories.
QM satisfies and can attain the Tsirelson inequality,FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:51 am @gill1109
Please demonstrate MATHEMATICALLY how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality while using the CHSH inequality.
Man o' man, you really don't have any freakin' clue at all do you? Or..., just being freakin' dishonest as hell!!! I guess I will have demonstrate how QM and the experiments cheat when they claim they have "violated" or exceeded the bound(s) of such an inequality. We will use CHSH as it is the most common inequality. It is pretty easy to see that if the 4 terms in the inequality are independent, the bound is 4 instead of 2 when some of the terms are dependent on each other which we demonstrate as +1 +1 - (-1) +1 = 4. And easy to see what happens in the case of quantum mechanics. Because of the negative cosine curve prediction, you are limited to using approx. +/- 0.707 per term instead of +/-1 and we demonstrate again as 0.707 + 0.707 - (- 0.707) + 0.707 =gill1109 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 14, 2021 8:05 amQM satisfies and can attain the Tsirelson inequality,FrediFizzx wrote: ↑Tue Nov 09, 2021 7:51 am @gill1109
Please demonstrate MATHEMATICALLY how QM or the experiments exceed the bounds on the CHSH inequality while using the CHSH inequality..
Joy Christian also derives this same inequality in his framework.
The CHSH inequality is.
The experiments confirm QM.
They do not “use” any inequality.
QM does not”use” any inequality.
I hope you understand that
Those theorems are about theoretical correlations. If you like, about experiments with really huge numbers of trials.
In practice, observed correlations can deviate from their large N limit.
In principle one can easily get data (simulated or observed) with
My 2001 paper https://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0110137 is about distributed computing, about attempts to generate quantum correlations on a network of computers. I show that under certain conditions, the probability of observing a value oflarger than 2 by any given amount is exponentially small in the number of trials.