CERN Colloquium

Scenes from the Quantum Century: From Curious Hippies to Novel Tests of Bell’s Inequality

by David Kaiser (MIT)

Europe/Zurich
500/1-001 - Main Auditorium (CERN)

500/1-001 - Main Auditorium

CERN

400
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Description

The hundredth anniversary of quantum mechanics in 2025-26 offers opportunities to consider the history of quantum theory and ask how some of our core ideas were introduced, debated, tested, and ultimately accepted. One of the most central conceptual ingredients of quantum theory is entanglement, nowadays so important to the burgeoning field of quantum information science and technology. Yet the history of quantum entanglement---and of physicists' efforts to understand whether entanglement is a robust feature of the world rather than merely an intriguing hypothesis---has been far from straightforward. In this talk I will describe how a colorful group of physicists during the 1970s wrestled with entanglement and with John Bell's now-famous inequality, exploring the subtle interplay between quantum nonlocality and relativity amid the California counterculture scene. More recently, retracing the history of efforts to conduct experimental tests of Bell's inequality helped to catalyze novel tests, which have aimed to close a series of loopholes, including the recent "Cosmic Bell” experiments. Together this new generation of experiments provides compelling evidence for quantum entanglement while constraining various alternative models---which exploit subtle loopholes---more thoroughly than ever before.
 

Coffee and tea will be served at 15h30

Organised by : Alexander Zhiboedov

 

 

Webcast
There is a live webcast for this event
Zoom Meeting ID
61666190701
Host
EP Seminars and Colloquia
Alternative hosts
Benoit Loyer, Alexander Zhiboedov
Passcode
59204866
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