Quantum Entanglement as a Consequence of a Cantorian Micro Spacetime Geometry

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DOI: 10.4236/jqis.2011.12007    9,831 Downloads   20,409 Views  Citations

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ABSTRACT

Building upon the pioneering work of J. Bell [1] and an incredible result due to L. Hardy [2] it was shown that the probability of quantum entanglement of two particles is a maximum of 9.0169945 percent [2]. This happens to be exactly the golden mean to the power of five (?5) [3-7]. Although it has gone largely unnoticed for a long time, this result was essentially established independently in a much wider context by the present author almost two decades ago [3-6]. The present work gives two fundamentally different derivations of Hardy’s beautiful result leading to precisely the same general conclusion, namely that by virtue of the zero measure of the underlying Cantorian-fractal spacetime geometry the notion of spatial separability in quantum physics is devoid of any meaning [7]. The first derivation is purely logical and uses a probability theory which combines the discrete with the continuum. The second derivation is purely geometrical and topological using the fundamental equations of a theory developed by the author and his collaborators frequently referred to as E-infinity or Cantorian spacetime theory [3-7].

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M. El Naschie, "Quantum Entanglement as a Consequence of a Cantorian Micro Spacetime Geometry," Journal of Quantum Information Science, Vol. 1 No. 2, 2011, pp. 50-53. doi: 10.4236/jqis.2011.12007.

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