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Why entanglement?

Price, Huw and Wharton, Ken (2022) Why entanglement? [Preprint]

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Abstract

In this piece, written for a general audience, we propose a mechanism for quantum entanglement. The key ingredient is the familiar statistical phenomenon of collider bias, or Berkson's bias. In the language of causal models a collider is a variable causally influenced by two or more other variables. Conditioning on a collider typically produces non-causal associations between its contributing causes, even if they are actually independent. It is easy to show that this phenomenon can produce associations analogous to Bell correlations, in suitable post-selected ensembles. It is also straightforward that such collider artefacts may become real connections, resembling causality, if a collider is 'constrained' (e.g., by a future boundary condition). We consider the time-reversed analogues of these points in the context of retrocausal models of QM. Retrocausality yields a collider at the source of an EPR-Bell particle pair, and in this case constraint of the collider is possible by normal methods of experimental preparation. It follows that connections resembling causality may be expected to emerge across such colliders, from one branch of the experiment to the other. Our hypothesis is that this constrained retrocausal collider bias is the origin of entanglement. The piece is based on a suggestion first made in arXiv:2101.05370 [quant-ph].


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Item Type: Preprint
Creators:
CreatorsEmailORCID
Price, Huwhp331@cam.ac.uk0000-0002-9091-760X
Wharton, Ken
Additional Information: The present version corrects a PDF problem identified by some readers in the earlier version.
Keywords: Entanglement, collider bias, retrocausality, Bell correlations
Subjects: General Issues > Causation
Specific Sciences > Probability/Statistics
Specific Sciences > Physics > Quantum Mechanics
Depositing User: Prof Huw Price
Date Deposited: 27 Dec 2022 18:30
Last Modified: 27 Dec 2022 18:30
Item ID: 21590
DOI or Unique Handle: https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2212.06986
Subjects: General Issues > Causation
Specific Sciences > Probability/Statistics
Specific Sciences > Physics > Quantum Mechanics
Date: 14 December 2022
URI: https://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/id/eprint/21590

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