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This article reconsiders the double-slit experiment by establishing a new type of relationship between it and the concept of entanglement. While the role of entanglement in the double-slit experiment has been considered, this particular relationship appears to have been missed in preceding discussions of the experiment, even by Bohr, who extensively used it to support his argument concerning quantum physics. The main reason for this relationship is the different roles of the diaphragm with slits in two setups, S1 and S2, defining the double-slit experiment as a quantum experiment. In S1, in each individual run of the experiment one can in principle (even if not actually) know throughout which slit the quantum object considered has passed; in S2 this knowledge is in principle impossible, which impossibility is coextensive with the appearance of the interference pattern, once a sufficient number of individual runs of the experiment have taken place. The article offers the following argument based on two new concepts, an "experimentally quantum object" and an "ontologically quantum object." In S1 the diaphragm can be treated as part of an observational arrangement and thus considered as a classical object, while the object passing through one or the other slit is considered as an "ontologically quantum object," defined as an object necessary to establish a quantum phenomenon. By contrast, in S2, the diaphragm can, via the concept of Heisenberg-von-Neumann cut, be treated as an "experimentally quantum object," defined as an object treatable by quantum theory, even while possibly being an ontologically classical object. This interaction is not an observation but a quantum entanglement between these two quantum objects, one ontologically and one experimentally quantum. This argument is grounded in a particular interpretation of quantum phenomena and quantum theory, which belongs to the class of interpretations designated here as "reality without realism" (RWR) interpretations. The article also argues that wave-particle complementarity, with which the concept of complementarity is often associated, plays little, if any, role in quantum physics, or in Bohr's thinking, and may be misleading in considering the double-slit experiment, often explained by using this complementarity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/e27080781 | DOI Listing |
Entropy (Basel)
July 2025
Literature, Theory, and Cultural Studies Program, Philosophy and Literature Program, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA.
This article reconsiders the double-slit experiment by establishing a new type of relationship between it and the concept of entanglement. While the role of entanglement in the double-slit experiment has been considered, this particular relationship appears to have been missed in preceding discussions of the experiment, even by Bohr, who extensively used it to support his argument concerning quantum physics. The main reason for this relationship is the different roles of the diaphragm with slits in two setups, S1 and S2, defining the double-slit experiment as a quantum experiment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
August 2025
ShanghaiTech University, School of Physical Science and Technology, Shanghai 201210, China.
Time-varying media break temporal translation symmetry, enabling advanced wave manipulation. However, this phenomenon remains largely unexplored in magnonic systems due to the challenge of achieving rapid and significant changes in magnon dispersion. Here, we construct a time-varying strong coupling between two magnon modes and observe chirped Rabi-like oscillations near the pulse edges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
College of Engineering and Technology, American University of the Middle East, 54200, Egaila, Kuwait.
This paper introduces a novel optimization algorithm, Young's double-slit experiment algorithm (YSDE), for accurately estimating the unknown parameters of Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC) models. The proposed method integrates the YDSE algorithm with five other metaheuristic techniques: the sine cosine Algorithm (SCA), moth flame optimization (MFO), Harris Hawk optimization (HHO), gray wolf optimization (GWO) and chimp optimization Algorithm (ChOA) to estimate six critical parameters of PEMFC. Comparative analysis demonstrates that the YDSE algorithm outperforms competing methods by achieving the lowest Sum of Square Error (SSE) with a minimum value of approximately 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Methods Biomech Biomed Engin
June 2025
School of Computer Science and Engineering, VIT Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai, India.
In this paper, advanced design and classification of wearable near-infrared spectroscopy device using temporal channel reconfiguration multi-graph convolutional neural networks for motor activity (WNISD-TRMCNN) are proposed. Input data is collected from real-time fNIRS data. The input data are pre-processed using event-triggered consensus Kalman filtering (ETCKF) to remove motion artefacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2025
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, S7N 5E2, Canada.
Young's double slit experiment has been the most explored technique to gauge a system's coherence properties. The limits of this technique in characterizing spatial coherence properties of high emittance, hard X-ray synchrotron sources have been performed at the BXDS-IVU beamline, Canadian Light Source (CLS). High emittance synchrotron sources have been assumed to possess sub-optimal coherence properties.
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