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Chapter 15: Quantum Entanglement

Chapter 15: Quantum Entanglement

pp. 209-267

Authors

, University of Edinburgh, , University of Edinburgh
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Summary

For observables like position and momentum, in quantum mechanics the quantum states in general do not give them an absolute existence. Their value in a particular system is generally only known once the measurement is made. Nevertheless, certain correlations can be present in a system. For a system that is made up of two or more parts that can be measured separately, such as at distinctly different spatial positions, the measurement of one part of the system may immediately imply what the measurement at another part of the system will be. This is a feature that can emerge in a quantum system which is entangled.

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