1. Introduction
In a recent spotlight article in
Nature [
1], the following paragraph can be found: “In fact, all quantum computers could be described as terrible. Decades of research have yet to yield a machine that can kick off the promised revolution in computing”. This is not surprising in light of many and varied physical contradictions and inconsistencies which are outlined in this article identifying physical processes hindering the implementation of the mathematical formalism of quantum non-locality in the context of photonic systems, as well as outlining feasible methods for the manipulation of state vectors on the Poincaré sphere for qubit data processing.
Over the last four decades or so, a narrative has been gradually entrenched in the field of quantum physics stating that the quantum environment of very low levels of energy associated with single photons, features a remarkable property of contact-free, remote influence by one act of detection or measurement on a second measurement of the other entangled pair-photon [
2,
3,
4]. The resultant correlations are meant to constitute a fundamental resource in quantum computing, and would require single-photon sources and photodetectors. Nevertheless, experimental results [
5] and analytic developments [
6,
7] have identified the possibility of achieving quantum-strong correlations with independent and multi-photon states.
Claims of quantum nonlocality apply to individual pairs of photons, but Bell inequalities - used as a definitive criterion of quantum nonlocality - involve ensemble probabilities and averages [
2,
3,
4]. Bell inequalities are derived from the locality condition for a joint probability of simultaneous detections
being equal to the product of the two local probabilities
[
2,
3]. It is claimed that only entangled states of photons can generate a joint probability of coincident detections
between two sequences A and B of binary ’1’ and ‘0’ values, arbitrarily and randomly distributed, that is larger than the product of the two local probabilities
, i.e.
. However, this inequality is easily satisfied by classical distributions. With
being the number of detected events of ‘1’, and
the number of simultaneously detected events, the conventional definitions of ensemble probabilities are the ratios of the detected events to the total number of initiated events
i.e.,
,
. Substituting these relations in the above inequality of probabilities results in
. The maximum number of
equals the lowest of the two local probabilities. Setting
, one finds that
, which holds for any two random, classical distributions.
For example, with , the maximal value of having simultaneous ‘1’s in both sequences is , for each ‘1’ appearing in the same order in both sequences. Depending on the relative, random orders of the ‘1’s in the two sequences, the value of the correlation probability ranges as .
Therefore, as this equality can be exceeded or violated with classical statistical distributions of random and arbitrary binary data sets, the derivation of Bell inequalities from this locality condition cannot constitute a boundary between quantum and classical probabilities of events, and its use as a criterion for particular nonlocal effects is unsubstantiated. Indeed, a scrutiny of landmark experiments in the second half of this article reveals physical contradictions and inconsistencies in the interpretation of results.
For the maximally entangled state
, the joint probability
of detecting one coincident pair of entangled photons with two separate polarization filters at locations A and B, with polarizations angles
, respectively, is calculated with the second-order Glauber correlation function ([
2] Sec.19.5):
after using the rotations of the field operators as and . For sequences of single photons, the probabilities for one-photon detections are equal for the two locations, i.e., and, similarly, . For , the joint correlation probability vanishes, , even though , implying that no photon detected at location A is coincident with a photon detected at location B, which is physically impossible.
Similarly, for , the joint probability is , which will vanish for . It would appear that the entangled state and/or the quantum nonlocality effect actually cause a reduction in the correlation value.
A correlation between simultaneously detected photons is different and distinct from the correlation function between polarization states on the Poincaré sphere calculated by means of the Pauli spin operators
, [
6] that is:
. Although linked through the equality
, neither the probability, nor the correlation provide any information about the sequential orders of the ‘1’s in the two data sets. As pointed out in the preceding paragraphs, it is the experimental time-dependent simultaneous appearance of the detections that determines the correlation as opposed to the average values of the probabilities.
The Bell inequalities involve expectation values or averages to specify range limits [
2,
3,
4]. By contrast, the effect of quantum non-locality would act between the two photons of the same original pair of photons by, allegedly, influencing the state of polarization at the level of each pair of photons [
2,
3,
4]. With only one pair of photons present at any time, this would involve only one of the two product states of an entangled states, which could be directly measured for instantaneous correlations or coincident detections, but this has never been done because of the low success rate of detections as a result of the quantum Rayleigh scattering of single photons [
6,
7,
8,
9,
10]. Additionally, the correlation operator given in terms of the Pauli spin vector will also yield quantum-strong correlation functions for independent states of photons [
5,
6].
Experiments designed to close loopholes linked to hidden variables are based on statistical considerations of Bell inequalities. But these inequalities ignore loopholes arising from physical interactions such as the quantum Rayleigh scattering of single photons and the polarization correlations between Stokes vectors. Such physical contradictions and inconsistencies are outlined in Section 2 of this article in relation to local measurements of polarization entangled photons. In Section 3, a distinction is made between the correlation of coincident detections of photons and the correlation between ensembles of measurements, as well as pointing out the flaws of the Bell inequalities. Section 4 scrutinizes landmark experiments in view of the analytic results of the previous sections and of references [
5,
6], explaining the failure to develop practical quantum computers and putting forward practical ways of processing data states on the Poincaré sphere. Physical aspects of the possibility to achieve quantum-strong correlations with independent, multi-photon states facilitating qubit rotations will be discussed in Section 5, and final conclusions will be listed in Section 6.
2. Physically Meaningful Wavefunctions
A series of contradictions and inconsistencies can be identified in the theory and experiments involving the concept of quantum nonlocality:
1) Quantum Rayleigh scattering [
8,
9,
10] prevents a straight-line propagation of a single photon, thereby ruling out coincident detections of the original pair of photons;
2) Independent photons produce quantum-strong correlations of detected polarization states [
5,
6];
3) Polarimetric, local measurements of a maximally entangled photon result in a zero-expectation value [
6]. For a local measurement of the Pauli operators
, in the context of a Bell state
, the expectation values vanish, i.e.,
, (
being the identity operator) delivering no information for a comparison between the two pair ensembles at locations A and B;
4) Experimental results alleging evidence of quantum nonlocality are obtained with low levels of entanglement instead of maximally entangled states [
11,
12];
5) The quantum nonlocality is meant to operate between the two pair-photons but Bell inequalities deal with the correlation between ensemble averages [
2,
11,
12,
13];
6) The wavefunction collapse upon the first measurement reduces the entangled state to a product state, with the probability of projective rotation of the polarization state being identical to that of an independent state.
Answers to these contradictions and inconsistencies have been presented in refs. [
6,
7,
9,
10] and further analytic solutions are derived in this Section 2 and the following Section 3.
2.1. Factorizing Quantum Probabilities Associated with Entangled States
It is claimed ([
2] p.583) that “… the probability distribution defined by an entangled state does not satisfy the principle of statistical separability, even when the parts are far apart in space.” This statement is contradicted by the formalism of the wave function collapse, or reduction, upon a first measurement at location A, which is followed by a second one at location B, as analysed in [
14] and expanded in this subsection.
If the optical source emits a time-dependent stream of polarized pair-photons, only one term of the entangled state, e.g., either
or
will be present at any given time for an individual measurement but not both. This physical reality is disregarded by the mixed quantum state, but is reintroduced through the wave function collapse, breaking up the “entanglement” between the two photons and bringing a time-dependence into the process of individual measurements analogous to the time-resolved detection of single photons [
14].
A different approach would be to evaluate the probability of detection at location B in two possible circumstances:
1. No detection takes place at location A, so that the projective measurement at location B involves the operator
acting on the initial state
and resulting in the probability of detection
after setting
and
. An identical result is obtained for the first detection at location A, i.e.,
.
2. A first detection takes place at location A involving the projective operator
, which results in the intermediary state for the projective amplitudes
and
, so that the reduced or collapsed wave function
becomes:
where
denotes the normalised wave function for the calculation of the detection probability at location B, conditional on a detection at location A. The normalization factor
for the collapsed wave function
corresponds to the probability of detection
for the first measurement, and after substituting for
from eq. (4) we have:
Based on the normalized state
, the probability of detection at location B following a detection at location A becomes in this case, for a projective measurement:
This result which can be found in ([
2] Sec.19.5) implies that for
, regardless of the values of
, the local probability of detection could peak at unity. This theoretical outcome is easily testable experimentally for direct evidence of a quantum nonlocal effect influencing the second measurement after the wave function collapse. But this has never been done either because of the quantum Rayleigh scattering of a single-photon and/or the non-existence of such a nonlocal effect. The product of the local probabilities of Equations (2) and (6) equals the expression of the joint probability
for simultaneous detections at both locations A and B, that is:
after inserting from Eqs. (4) and (5) in the equality (7a). The equality (7b) provides a direct calculation of the joint probability, confirming the validity of the derivation. With the conditional probability of local detection
being, mathematically, lower than, or at best, equal to the local probability of detection
in the absence of a first detection, i.e.,
, the formalism of wave function collapse gives rise to a factorization of local probabilities and imposes an upper bound on the quantum joint probability, in clear contradiction to the conventional assumption ([
2] p.538), [
3]. This formalism delivers average values of the ensembles rather than correlation between the sequential orders of the detections, as explained in the Introduction section. The possibility of factorizing the quantum probability for joint events as in (7a) is identical to the classical case of joint probabilities with the second local probability being conditioned on a first detection. This strong similarity between the classical and quantum joint probabilities renders the local condition of separability [
2,
3] irrelevant for the derivation of Bell inequalities.
However, as local measurements at location B results in a difference between =1/2 and , experimental proof, or otherwise, of any quantum nonlocal effects can be verified by carrying out two ensembles of measurements, one with a prior detection at location A and the second one without such a detection. Additionally, by switching on and off the measurement at location A, a signal would be detected at location B between zero and non-zero probabilities, by simply coordinating the two filters’ angles to be equal for the zero probability of joint detections.
The use of a global quantum state which is time- and space-independent for the description of a time-dependent source output has led in many cases to physically impossible conclusions which were, nonetheless, taken as the “miracles” of quantum optics and quantum mechanics. In other words, even though information about the quantum system can be obtained from each individual measurement, the predictions of expected values of dynamic variables are based on global quantum states which discard a great deal of information.
2.2. System-Descriptive Wavefunctions for Time-Varying Inputs
Our quest for a physically meaningful wave function is based on the first paragraph of the review [
15] which reads:
“A quantum state is what one knows about a physical system. The known information is codified in a state vector , or in a density operator , in a way that enables the observer to make the best possible statistical predictions about any future interactions (including measurements involving the system). ([
15] p. 299).
The maximally entangled state of
is time-independent corresponding to a mixed quantum state composed of two pure product states. For only one pair of photons being generated at any given time [
11,
12], the time-dependent wavefunction
will result in two data sets being measured at different times, one for each product term, with
or
, and the basis states
being aligned with the
x and
y axes of the joint frame of coordinates in the measurement space.
The following paragraph is highly indicative of the shortcomings associated with an approach or formalism that deliberately overlooks physical elements and aspects of experimental setups. This paragraph reads [
15]:
“In order to prepare a heralded photon, a parametric down-conversion (PDC) setup is pumped relatively weakly so it generates, on average, much less than a single photon pair per laser pulse (or the inverse PDC bandwidth). The two generated photons are separated into two emission channels according to their propagation direction, wavelength, and/or polarization. Detection of a photon in one of the emission channels (labelled trigger or idler) causes the state of the photon pair to collapse, projecting the quantum state in the remaining (signal) channel into a single-photon state.” ([
15] p. 311).
Experiments of correlated polarization states in the quantum regime would have one photon per radiation mode propagate in a straight-line in a dielectric medium in order to synchronize their detections. Yet, the quantum Rayleigh scattering [
7,
8,
9,
10] would prevent such a straight-line propagation, thereby making a synchronized detection impossible.
As derived and explained in [
9], the parametric amplification is unavoidable and is accompanied by a phase-pulling effect which leads to the optimal condition for amplification. The alleged collapse of the state of the pair of photons, upon detection of one of them, into a single-photon state of the photon assumes that a single photon per radiation mode can propagate across a dielectric medium in a straight-line to the target photodetector. As explained previously [
7,
8,
9,
10], this assumption is ruled out by the existence of the quantum Rayleigh scattering in dielectric media such as optical fibres and beam splitters. But the parametrically amplified group of photons will propagate in a straight-line by recapturing an absorbed photon through the quantum Rayleigh stimulated emission [
9,
10]. Additionally, the formation in a beam splitter of groups of identical photons through quantum Rayleigh stimulated emission is presented in [
9,
10].
2.3. The Quantum Case of Time-Dependent Correlation Functions
The conventional interpretation of coincident detections of a pair of polarization-entangled photons would have one photon each reach photodetectors A and B, spatially separated. But the two possible polarization states of each photon are mutually exclusive in time so that two data sets are probed separately at the level of each individual quantum event, with the statistical distribution of the mixed state describing the overall two ensembles of events. Thus, a physically meaningful wavefunction describing the two data sets will have a time dependence of only one pair of photons being present at any given time, e.g.:
where
or
, and
are aligned with the
x and
y axes of the joint frame of coordinates in the measurement space. The ensemble averages of the coefficients are:
resulting, mathematically, in a maximally entangled state for an ensemble of measurements.
The common approach ([
2] Sec.19.5) would have the input photon absorbed through the annihilation operator
, followed by a rotation of the creation operator
and the appearance of the photon along the polarization filter’s orientation
.
For one photon projected onto the filter state
at location A, the detection probability
of one photon at orientation angle
, following the collapse of the wave function upon the first sequential measurement, introduces a time dependence of the two mutually exclusive terms. For THE sum of the two terms the probability of photodetection at location A is:
And, similarly, for the location B:
This time-dependence reproduces the time variation at the source output. Consequently, the entangled state plays no role in the detection processes of the two time-separated ensembles of measurements.
For two simultaneous detections, one each at A and B, the probability
of coincident detections takes the form:
The time-separation at the source is given by or. This time-dependence is reproduced through the wavefunction collapse upon the first measurement. The first measurement returns a random detection, while the second measurement does not involve the original entangled state.
Two data sets of measurements are recorded, one for each term of two photons in eq. (8), leading to the separate probabilities
(
j = 1 or 2). And the sum of probabilities obtained for the sum of the two data sets of pairs of photons becomes by combining Eqs. (9-11) is:
after setting for the statistical average of
. As an example, we set
to obtain that
for any value of
, including
, in contrast to eq. (7b).
The two ensembles of detections do not overlap temporally, and their correlation is determined by the sequential order of the ‘1’s and ‘0’s and can vary from one ensemble to another. The physical absence of the interference term is brought about by the two temporally non-overlapping detections ([
14] eq. (9)). The two data sets occur at different times and any correlation can only be mathematical.
The correlation probability calculated for the entangled state
is:
which appears to indicate a physical correlation of measured ensembles; however, all states need to be populated simultaneously, which experimentally happens, as a result of the parametric amplification of the spontaneously emitted photons [
6]. The number of photons simultaneously present in the system is much larger than two.
The correlation between quantum mixed states of polarizations can also be obtained between classical states of polarization in the Jones representation. The correlation function
is the overlap between two state vectors
and
leading to
. This result is equivalent to the correlation of polarization states on the the Poincaré sphere [
6].
3. Classical Joint Probabilities Exceeding the Product of Local Probabilities
As explained in the Introduction, a joint probability of coincident detections that is larger than the product of the two local probabilities, i.e., can be easily obtained with classical distributions of binary values of ‘1’ and ‘0’.
The derivation of Bell inequalities is based on the locality assumption [
2,
3]. “The joint probability distribution
of obtaining outcomes
a and
b for measurements
x and
y, should factorize” [
3] into :
where for local statistics, the probabilities for outcomes
a and
b are
, respectively. The variable
is meant to provide a correlation between the two measurements as a result of some past event involving the two separated systems of photons.
Mathematically, the derivation of Bell inequalities would have ‘hidden’ variables impact the statistical averages over the outcomes of simultaneous measurements. It is stated in ([
2] p.588) that “In typical experiments, the complete specification of the state represented by
λ is not available—for example, the values of the hidden variables cannot be determined—so the strong separability condition must be averaged over a distribution
ρ(
λ) that represents the experimental information that is available.” Additionally, “…the condition for statistical independence” ([
2] p. 588) is:
“For the typical situation in which the complete state
λ is not known, the Bell parameter
S (
λ) should be replaced by the experimentally relevant quantity
“ ([
2] p. 589) which leads to the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt inequality.
The Clauser- Horne inequality used in [
11,
12] involves only joint probabilities of outcomes, and written for further consideration as:
But, with only two photons present at any given time, this inequality requires four different ensembles of measurements for the four pairs of settings which are probed at separate times. By contrast, the quantum nonlocality is supposed to act at the level of each pair of photons [
13]. In eq. (16), e.g.,
stands for a detection at location A for setting
and no detection at location B for setting
. However, the inequality (16) cannot be violated even with optimal conditions because of the opposite requirements for the difference and sum of probabilities as explained in the next paragraph.
With identical devices and settings, the quantum effect of nonlocality should maximize the joint probabilities on the left-hand side of Eq. (16) and minimize the probabilities on its right-hand side. For example, with
the probabilities, as defined in the Introduction section, are set equal
and
, leading to maximal values of
and
. On the right-hand side of eq. (16), minimal probability values for the detections of ‘1’s coinciding with ‘0’s are calculated by subtracting from the larger probability for ‘1’s the lower probability for ‘1’s, i.e.,
. Equally,
. Inserting these values into eq. (16), we have 0.8 − 0.2 < 2 (0.8 − 0.2) = 1.2, which does not violate the inequality despite the maximally possible values allegedly generated by the quantum nonlocality effect for distributions of two binary and random data sets. Once again, as explained in the Introduction, the condition for the joint probability being the product of local probabilities as the criterion above which quantum effects are meant to occur is physically unsubstantiated, particularly so, in view of the product of local probabilities derived in Eqs. (7) and the experimental results of [
5].
Experimentally, however, very low probabilities of detections are recorded because of the quantum Rayleigh scattering of single photons. The experimental violation of eq. (16) in [
11,
12] is possible because of the parametric amplification of the spontaneous emission in the original nonlinear crystal, so that the presence of multiple photons per radiation modes enhances the probability of coupling and detecting ‘1’s, which will be considered in the following sub-sections 3.1-3.3.
Overall, the hidden variables of the Bell inequalities play no role in the derivation of the inequalities. Physically, ‘hidden’ variables should be included in the wave functions associated with physical processes and linked to the mechanisms, processes, effects, etc. that bring about those detected outcomes. In this context, time-varying inputs, averaged over fluctuating local conditions, lead to the existence of multi-photon wave fronts which are mistaken for single photons.
3.1. Physical Factors Reducing the Correlations of Coincident Detections
For classical probabilities any hidden variable
will be set aside, and the following ratio of classical probabilities can be obtained from eq. (14) with
As pointed out in the Introduction, this ratio can be larger than unity, indicating a stronger correlation between measurements than the locality condition which was arbitrarily defined. This will happen for two series of individual binary outputs of ‘1’ and ‘0’, with all the detections ‘1’ of b coinciding with detections ‘1’ of a. For the same ensemble averages, the correlation value of the one-to-one same order component, may vary from zero to the minimum of the two probabilities.
For an input of multi-photon states, loss effects may not annihilate all the input photons, so that the number of detections increases regardless of the projective probability
which provides a mathematical average. For a single-photon input, the density distribution per solid angle
of the mixed quantum state arising from spontaneous emission that follows the radiation pattern of an oscillating dipole is [
16,
17]:
where the solid angle of emission is
, the polar angle between the electric dipole vector and the polarization vector of the emitted photon is
, and
is the azimuthal angle in the plane perpendicular to the dipole [
16,
17]. It is this distribution of the Rayleigh spontaneously emitted photons over the range {
}, that randomly rotates the polarization state of the absorbed photons.
Physically, however, one single photon is scattered randomly by quantum Rayleigh photon-dipole interactions. By contrast, a group of identical photons can propagate in a straight line inside a dielectric medium through quantum Rayleigh stimulated emission. This process of stimulated emission can also amplify a spontaneously emitted photon with a rotated polarization, particularly so if the polarization modulator and analyser enable a lossless mode to propagate [
9,
10].
3.2. Correlations of Coincident Detections of Independent Photons
A series or an ensemble of detection measurements is mathematically cast into a temporal vector
along polarization output angle
, and for a polarization input setting
. The elements of the data vector are
for a detection event or no detection, respectively, of the
m-th order element. Thus,
has the following averaged number of ‘1’ terms summed over the probing times
for one photon of polarization
H or
V in the measurement frame of coordinates:
where
specifies the quantum efficiency of cross-polarization coupling,
, namely, the total number of events
is split equally between the two input polarizations
H or
V polarization,
is the polarization angle of the analysing filter at location A,
is a rotation setting of the electro-optic modulator, the probing times area
and
is the probability of detecting a pulse, for input
H or V and polarization filter rotated by
. For input polarization
V, orthogonal to
H, the rotation angle is:
and the probability of detection along
is
. The average number of ‘0’s is found from the expression:
.
The correlation vector
of simultaneous detections between two arbitrary and random series
and
or ensembles, at locations A and B, respectively, is expressed as the product of the two
m-th order terms, of simultaneous or coincident detections
leading to an average
of ‘1’s or joint probability of simultaneous detections:
By considering all possible combinations in Eq. (20), it is obvious that the order of the random distributions of the two sequences will determine the value of the joint probability of correlation whose maximal value equals the lowest of the two local probabilities . The values of may exceed the definition of the local condition for independent probabilities, i.e., . These analytic results modelling lossless systems would produce, as explained in the Introduction, correlation values larger than 0.25 which cannot be achieved experimentally because of the presence of the quantum Rayleigh scattering of photons.
A distinction needs to be made between the probability of coincident events at the level of each individual event, and the product of probabilities of ‘1’s in each ensemble of measurements which is, in fact, the product of the averaged values or polarization states.
From a physical perspective, identical systems operated in identical ways will yield identical distributions of outcomes, which is critical in the reproduction of experimental results. Given the low quantum efficiencies of ‘single-photon’ detections, the performance of correlated outputs can be significantly increased by launching, into the two systems, groups of identical photons as generated by the parametric amplification in the original crystal [
9,
10], or externally controlled number of photons [
5]. In such circumstances, the likelihood of a few photons reaching the output photodetectors simultaneously will be even larger than the probability of Eq. (20).
3.3. Polarization-Controlled Corelated Output of Multi-Photon States
With multiple photons propagating in both input orthogonal states of polarization
H and
V, one can control the output intensity through interference of the intrinsic fields of groups of identical photons coupled onto the filter’s polarization state of rotation angle
. Following the results of [
9,
10] that identified dynamic and coherent number states
and recalling the non-Hermicity of the field operators [
10], we find that
, which provides a complex field amplitude [
10], for the time-dependent evolutions of photonic beam fronts. The output intensity, for fluctuating numbers of photons
and the expectation number
of the interference between pure states, take the forms:
where
is the visibility, and
is the temporal overlap between the intrinsic optical fields of the photons whose derivation is available in [
10]. The time-varying phases of the two polarization states are
.
With max
in eq. (22), the lowest number of photons is always larger than zero, which increases the probability of detection. Overall, the more photons are trapped in the system through quantum Rayleigh spontaneous emission [
9,
10], the more likely it is for groups of identical photons to form through quantum Rayleigh stimulated emission [
9,
10]. As a result, single photons coalesce into groups of multi-photon states, thereby changing the statistical outcomes.
4. A Scrutiny of Landmark Experiments
The concept of quantum nonlocality emerged from the mathematical formalism of quantum mechanics, but its practical implementation in quantum optics needs to comply with the well-established processes involving light-matter interactions. Yet, in order to push through the concept of photonic quantum nonlocality, various researchers chose to ignore the basics of optical physics, and, instead invoked statistical calculations which are contradicted by the physical reality, as demonstrated in the Introduction and Section 2 of this article.
Significant physical contradictions have been overlooked in the opinion article by Aspect [
13] hailing the results of refs. [
11,
12] as “definitive proof” of one measurement influencing remotely another measurement, bringing about the end of the Einstein-Bohr debate. However, in this Section a scrutiny of these landmark experiments [
11,
12] disproves the existence of photonic quantum nonlocality as its theory is riddled with physical contradictions and inconsistencies as outlined in Section 2 this article.
Experimental evidence of strong-quantum correlations obtained with non-entangled photons [
5] were published in early 2020 but were overlooked because they did not fit the prevailing interpretation [
13]. Equally, a growing body of analytic developments before and after 2015 have repeatedly demonstrated the statistical nature [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23] of quantum nonlocality experiments. Recently, the quantum Rayleigh scattering of single photons [
8] has been identified as a physical mechanism undermining the implementation of the concept of quantum nonlocality [
6,
7].
The concept of quantum nonlocality was summarized by Aspect in the first paragraph of ref. [
13] as “the idea that a measurement on one particle in an entangled pair could affect the state of the other—distant—particle.” The alleged physical effect was illustrated for the entangled state
of two polarized photons shown in the inset to Figure 1 of [
13] for which “quantum mechanics predicts that the polarization measurements performed at the two distant stations will be strongly correlated“. Another quotation of interest is: “In what are now known as Bell’s inequalities, he showed that, for any local realist formalism, there exist limits on the predicted correlations.” However, independent photons or multi-photon states also deliver quantum-strong correlation functions because the Pauli spin operators act on the polarization state regardless of the number of photons it carries. In this context, the overlap, in the measurement Hilbert space, between two polarization Stokes vectors measured separately at two distant locations generate the same correlation functions [
5,
6,
7], thereby explaining the comparison of the experimental outcomes without invoking ‘quantum nonlocality’.
4.1. The Quantum Rayleigh Scattering of Single Photons
Although well-documented, e.g., [
16,
17] four decades ago, the physical process of quantum Rayleigh scattering has been consistently ignored in the conventional theory of quantum optics [
2]. A single photon cannot propagate in a straight-line inside a dielectric medium because of the quantum Rayleigh scattering associated with photon-dipole interactions. Groups of photons are created through parametric amplification in the nonlinear crystal in which spontaneous emissions first occur, generating pair photons from a pump photon. Such a group of photons will maintain a straight line of propagation by recapturing an absorbed photon through stimulated Rayleigh emission. The assumption that spontaneously emitted, parametrically down-converted individual photons cannot be amplified in the originating crystal because of a low level of pump power would, in fact, prevent any sustained emission in the direction of phase-matching condition because of the Rayleigh spontaneous scattering [
6,
7]. As pointed out in Eq. (18), the spatial distribution of the spontaneously emitted photons spans the a broad solid angle, not only the direction of phase-matching condition.
Evidence of single-photon scattering can be found in ref. [
12], in the Supplemental Material reporting that “In our experiment no photons are detected during a large number of trials, and these trials contribute little to the Bell violation.” Equally, the experiments of [
12] “… employed single-photon optical time domain reflectometry (OTDR) to measure the transit time of light through all the optical fibers and some of the free-space optical paths in the experimental setup.”
The probability of detecting a photon and its quantum effect is reported in Table S-II on page 16 [
12], to be less than 0.01%. This extremely low level of maximal detection probability is also reported in Figure 3 of ref. [
11]. It should be obvious that such extremely low probabilities cannot describe the presence of a physical phenomenon. Rather, these probabilities would indicate random statistical measurements which are consistent with the statistical explanation for measurements of correlated outputs [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23].
Physically, quantum entanglement of photonic states implies a strong correlation between the same properties of the same variable or degree of freedom measured separately on each of the two entangled photons. These properties are the consequence of a common past interaction between these photons and those properties generated in the common interaction can be carried away from the position and time of that interaction.
Even recent experiments [
24] using optically nonlinear crystals for parametric down-conversion of photons, report detection probabilities lower than 1%, pointing out that “The raw data are sifted” for a particular purpose. All these bring to the fore the unavoidable amplification of spontaneously emitted photons [
6,
9,
10]. An indication of the existence of the quantum Rayleigh scattering can be seen from the extensive loss of photons that has been a constant feature of photon coincidence counting. For example, ref. [
24] reports on page 3 of the Supplementary Information: “The success probability of the entanglement generation process, i.e. detection of a photon after an excitation pulse, equals 5.98 ×10
−3 and 1.44 × 10
−3 for Alice’s device and Bob’s device, respectively”. A typical percentage of lost photons is, at least, 99.9% as mentioned independently.
4.2. The Absence of Quantum Nonlocality upon Sequential Measurements
The joint probability of detecting simultaneous photons depends on the random orders in the locally detected sequences, as explained in Section 3. Classical distributions of joint probabilities can easily exceed the value of their products as explained in the Introduction. A formalism based on wave function collapse – requiring a first detection followed by a second one – leads to the possibility of detecting locally the assumed existence of the quantum nonlocality effect, as described by Eqs. (7).
Quantum nonlocality is claimed to influence the measurement of the polarization state of one photon at location B, which is paired with another photon measured at location A. The two photons are said to be components of the same entangled state. Maximally entangled states, such as of Eq. (23), represented in the same frame of coordinates of horizontal (x) and vertical (y) polarizations, would deliver the strongest correlation values between separate measurements of polarization states recorded at the two locations A and B.
The experimental results of refs. [
11,
12] were measured with a low level of entanglement, with the reported mixed states having one component much larger than the other, thereby allowing for measurements of unentangled (or non-entangled) product states. From equations (2) of both references, their experimental optimal ratios of the two amplitudes are 2.9 and 0.961/0.276, respectively, in [
11,
12].
If a collapse of the wave function is to take place for entangled photons upon detection of a photon at either location, then the two separate measurements do not coincide. In this case, a polarimetric local measurement vanishes for the maximally entangled Bell states, e.g.,
, with
being the identity operator, and the projecting Pauli operators are in this case
and
Thus, a physical contradiction arises as local experimental outcomes determine the mixed quantum state of polarization of the ensemble to be compared with its pair quantum state. As a matter of physical measurement, for the partially entangled state of
, with
, the local measurement will deliver
indicating that the largest expectation value will be achieved with pure states, for either
, or
. Upon comparison of the two separately measured data sets, the strongest correlation will be detected for pure product states [
6] which are, in fact, obtained theoretically by invoking wavefunction collapse upon measurement.
This overlooked feature of maximally entangled Bell states renders them incompatible with the polarimetric measurements carried out to determine the state of polarization of photons, thereby explaining the experimental results of ref. [
5] which were obtained with independent photons, indicating the possibility of obtaining quantum-strong correlations without entangled photons as pointed out in ref. [
6]. The wave function collapse would bring about a product state as part of a time-dependent partial ensemble of measurements.
The mixed quantum state
is space- and time-independent and considered to be a global state which can be used in any context, anywhere, and at any time. Nevertheless, the Hilbert spaces of the two photons move away from each other and do not spatially overlap, so that any composite Hilbert space is
mathematically generated by means of a tensor product at a third location where the comparison of data is performed. Even so, the absence of a Hamiltonian of interaction renders any suggestion of a mutual influence physically impossible [
18].
4.3. Correlation Functions
Maximally entangled states, represented in the same frame of coordinates of horizontal and vertical polarizations, would deliver the strongest values of the correlation function for the Pauli spin vectors operators:
for identical inputs to the two separate apparatuses, with the polarization filters rotated by an angle
, respectively, from the horizontal axis. However, quantum-strong correlations with independent photons have been demonstrated experimentally [
5] but ignored by legacy journals because they did not fit in with the theory of quantum nonlocality. The same correlation function
is obtained ‘classically’, as a result of the overlap of two polarization Stokes vectors of the polarization filters on the Poincaré sphere [
6] The Stokes parameters correspond to the expectation values of the Pauli spin operators [
6].
The correlation function is a
numerical calculation as opposed to a physical interaction. Thus, the numerical comparison of the data sets is carried out at a third location
C where the reference system of coordinates is located for comparison or correlation calculations of the two sets of measured data, and does not require physical overlap of the observables whose operators are aligned with the system of coordinates of the measurement Hilbert space onto which the detected state vectors are mapped. In this case, the correlation operator
can be reduced to ([
25] Eq. (A6)):
where the polarization vectors
and
identify the orientation of the detecting polarization filters in the Stokes representation, and
is the Pauli spin vector (with
). The presence of the identity operator in Eq. (25) implies that, when the last term vanishes for a linear polarization state, the correlation function is determined by the orientations of the polarization filters. This can be easily done with independent and linearly polarized states, such as:
where the index
j =
A or
B identifies the photodetector. The same state reaches both detectors.
The polarization operator
projects the incoming states onto the measurement Hilbert space for comparison of the two separate data sets. The polarization measurement operators of
produce the output states
which, analogously to the overlapping inner product of two state vectors, lead to the correlation function of [
6]
The quantum correlation function of Eq. (28) between two independent states of polarized photons is equivalent to the overlap of their Stokes vectors on the joint Poincaré sphere of the measurement Hilbert space. Quantum-strong correlation are possible with independent states of photons [
5,
6] because the source of the correlation is the polarization states of the detecting filters or analyzers, making any claim of quantum nonlocality unnecessary.
4.4. Bell-Type Inequalities
As emphasized in the Introduction and in Section 3, the locality condition of separability of probabilities is easily exceeded by classical probabilities. As a consequence, any derivation of Bell-inequalities becomes physically irrelevant as a boundary between the quantum and classical regimes.
The CH inequality used in [
11,
12] cannot be violated with measurements involving only a pair of photons for one simultaneous or coincident event as explained in Section 3. The more photons there are in the group of identical photons, the higher the probabilities of detection. Section 2 above, explains in Eqs. (1) to (7) the possibility of local measurements directly detecting any quantum nonlocality effect that might exist, as a result of a wave function collapse.
Polarimetric measurements made in the quantum regime are based on the Pauli spin operators whose expectation values are displayed on the Poincaré sphere. However, these operators act on the state of polarization regardless of the number of photons carried by the radiation mode, instantaneously. The correlation functions needed to evaluate various Bell-type inequalities take the same form in both the quantum and classical regimes, and correspond to the overlap of the polarization states in the Stokes representation [
5,
6].
Quantum measurements violating Bell-type inequalities are supposed to be based on entangled states of single photons and prove the existence of quantum nonlocality between simultaneous pair- photons. But the violations of Bell inequalities rely on the correlation functions of the two ensembles of measurements as opposed to the same pair of photons; that is, the correlations are obtained as a result of a numerical comparison of the expectation values of ensembles, and are not a physical interaction. The photonic properties of each pair were carried away from the space and time of the original interaction, with the measurement identifying which of the two photons possessed the respective states of polarization.
Another glaring contradiction of the quantum nonlocality interpretation can be found in ref. [
13]. In the caption to Figure 1, on its second page, one reads:
“…if both polarizers area aligned along the same direction (a=b), then the results of A and B will be either (+1; +1) or (-1; -1) but never (+1; -1) or (-1; +1.); this is a total correlation as can be determined by measuring the four rates with the fourfold detection circuit”.
This statement first deals with single, individual events but in the second part it mentions “rates” which apply to ensembles of measurements (as degree or comparative extent of action or procedure). Now, if it is possible, with entangled photons, to have 100% correlation at the level of individual events, then one could easily carry out a short series of measurements to find simultaneous detections and prove directly the existence of quantum nonlocality, rather than use, indirectly, Bell-type inequalities to claim it from correlations of ensembles. Ensemble distributions also cover non-simultaneous single detections that are taken to be simultaneous in order to reach the 100% correlation value.
Ensembles of two separate measurements lead to two sets of probabilities. Correlations between distributions of ensemble probabilities are calculated as the expectation value of the correlation operator to be as opposed to probabilities of single, individual events , identical for both locations with .
For example, if one in ten photons is detected, then, for entangled photons, the two separate detections should happen simultaneously with a ratio of 1:10, as claimed with quantum nonlocality. This would allow a direct measurement and demonstration of quantum nonlocality without the need for Bell-type inequalities that involve ensembles of measurements. But this cannot be done because a single photon is diverted by the quantum Rayleigh scattering in a dielectric medium from a straight-line propagation. Therefore, no quantum nonlocality has been demonstrated in so far as single photons are concerned.
Bell-type inequalities can also be violated classically because the same correlation function is derived for both the quantum and classical regimes, as explained in the previous sub-section 4.3. Thus, from a technological perspective, functional devices needed for strong correlations between two separate outputs can be achieved with multiple photons, thereby obviating the need for complicated and expensive single photon sources and photodetectors.
5. Physical Aspects and Discussion of Physical Processes
At least three critical elements have been ignored in the interpretations of experimental results alleging proof of quantum nonlocality: 1) the quantum Rayleigh scattering involving photon-dipole interactions in a dielectric medium, which prevents a single photon from propagating in a straight-line, thereby obstructing the synchronized detections of initially paired-photons; 2) the unavoidable parametric amplification of the spontaneously emitted photons in the nonlinear crystal of the original source; and 3) the experimental evidence of quantum-strong correlations between polarization states or statistical ensembles of multi-photon, independent states.
The existence of the quantum Rayleigh (QR) scattering was well documented back in the 1970s in textbooks [
16,
17] and its absence from the theory of Quantum Optics developed since the early 1980s is still a puzzling question. A possible answer would be that the “miracles” of quantum optics would have needed explaining by other physical means, requiring a multi-disciplinary approach.
The concept of quantum nonlocality claims the existence of a strong correlation between measurements involving two entangled photons generated as a pair. The Bell inequalities impose a limit on the calculated correlation between ensembles of measurements involving an unlimited number of pairs of photons. But Bell inequalities can be experimentally violated with independent states of photons [
5] because the correlations can be equally generated classically [
6]. And the entangled states are broken up by a first projective measurement of one of the pair-photons as required for a ‘nonlocal quantum influence’.
Bell inequalities can be violated with expectation values from independent and multi-photon states [
5,
6]. Equally, as explained in the Introduction, joint classical probabilities exceed the value of their product. There is no physical evidence of quantum non-locality for the simple reason that the Bell inequalities involve ensemble averages, whereas the quantum non-locality effect would act at the level of each qubit of photons or individual pairs of spatially separated, apparently entangled particles. As explained in Section 2, upon the first detection of an entangled pair of photons, the joint probability become factorized as the product of the two local probabilities, bringing about the possibility of local detection of an apparent quantum nonlocality. But such an experiment is yet to be carried out despite its simplicity.
The theoretical concept of photonic quantum nonlocality cannot be implemented physically because of the quantum Rayleigh scattering of single photons. A physical scrutiny of landmark experiments [
11,
12] has been undertaken. These articles reported that measured outcomes were fitted with quantum states possessing a dominant component of non-entangled photons, thereby contradicting their own claim of quantum nonlocality. With probabilities of photon detections lower than 0.1 %, the alleged quantum nonlocality cannot be classified as a resource for developing quantum computing devices, despite recent publicity. Experimental evidence of a feasible process for quantum-strong correlations has been identified [
6] in terms of correlations between independent and multi-photon states evaluated as Stokes vectors on the Poincaré sphere. As single-photon sources are not needed, the design and implementation of quantum computing operations and other devices will be significantly streamlined.
It is a common practice among the proponents of quantum nonlocality to ignore any physically meaningful interpretation of the relevant experiments. For example, a special issue on Quantum Nonlocality [
26] does not mention at all any articles which disprove the concept of quantum nonlocality. Instead, rather contradictory statements were presented: “The quantum nonlocality also has an operational meaning for us, local observers, who can live only in a single world. Given entangled particles placed at a distance, a measurement on one of the particles instantaneously changes the quantum state of the other, from a density matrix to a pure state“. “What seems to be an unavoidable aspect of nonlocality of the quantum theory—which is present even in the framework of all worlds together—is entanglement. Measurement on one system does not change the state of the other system in the physical universe, but in each world created by the measurement, the state of the remote system is different. The entanglement, that is, the nonlocal connection between the outcomes of measurements shown to be unremovable using local hidden variables, is the ultimate nonlocality of quantum systems” [
26]. Yet, all these statements have been proven to be unsubstantiated in the various Sections of this article, and in references [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23], as well as experimentally [
5].
Equally, the popular promotion [
27] of research articles makes rather exaggerated claims such as: “The phenomenon of quantum nonlocality defies our everyday intuition. It shows the strong correlations between several quantum particles some of which change their state instantaneously when the others are measured, regardless of the distance between them.” Such interpretations can be easily disproved [
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23].
This misinformation of refs. [
26,
27] has not produced any quantum computer despite more than two decades of heavy investment as pointed out in ref. [
1].