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Questions tagged [locality]

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-3 votes
0 answers
70 views

Please tell me about "Action at a distance" in Electrodynamics [closed]

I am confused about how test charge informed about source charge. So I research on it. Web said me that it is "Action at a distance phenomenon". What is this? I am a first year Undergraduate ...
Arpan Purkait's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
60 views

How is information defined when considering locality in quantum mechanics?

$\newcommand{\ket}[1]{|#1\rangle}$ My question is a follow-up from this discussion about the presence of non-local correlations in a theory that is deemed local. The first answer talks about the ...
UVcatastrophe's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
54 views

Is there any restriction for locally mapping a given 2-qubit density matrix into a desired 2-qubit density matrix with lower entanglement?

Suppose we're given a 2-qubit density matrix($\rho_{4\times4}$). we can apply two local maps on each of these qubits seperatly. So the output is density matrix($\rho^{\prime}_{4\times4}$). I'm ...
xhian's user avatar
  • 27
1 vote
1 answer
57 views

Definition of “quasi-locality” in Wilsonian RG scheme

I’m studying about the holographic RG with this paper. In that paper they say Wilsonian action expects quasi locality, but I’m not sure what “quasi-locality" exactly means. If quasi-locality ...
Positron3873's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
62 views

Can you model relativistic interactions without locality?

Assume $c=1$ I've been doing relativity by myself so I may be making some assumptions here that I would not have if my learning had been more extensive. One such assumption is that you can model the ...
NaiDoeShacks's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
123 views

Is conservation of energy a local law in Quantum field theory? [closed]

From Wikipedia, "The local energy conservation in quantum field theory is ensured by the quantum Noether's theorem for the energy-momentum tensor operator. Thus energy is conserved by the normal ...
KleinMoretti's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
35 views

Lorentz invariance (LI) of time ordering operation

At Srednicki after eq. (4.10), we have a discussion about that the time ordering operation. Have to be frame inv. I.e it has to be LI. He wrote that for timelike separation we don't have to worry ...
Alon Buzaglo Shoub's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
126 views

On the notion of Local Causality

In 1976, John Bell proved that any locally causal theory can't account for certain observed correlations, he formulated the local causality hypotesis in terms of "local beables". In ...
Davyz2's user avatar
  • 407
7 votes
4 answers
3k views

Confusion around Bell's Theorem and Locality

I recently got interested in foundational aspects of quantum mechanics and I have some questions: Bell's theorem proves that any local, deterministic theory with statistical independence can't account ...
Davyz2's user avatar
  • 407
1 vote
1 answer
191 views

$SO(3,1)$ is locally $SU(2)\times SU(2)$, what does *locally* mean here?

I am learning Lie group and Lie algebra. I saw in a YouTube video "Supersymmetry lecture 02" from OpenCourseWare (OCW) at University of Cambridge at 11:17 that $SO(3,1)$ is locally $SU(2) \...
Fermion's user avatar
  • 53
0 votes
1 answer
70 views

Equivalence of two entangling operators with respect to local operators

Suppose that $U_1$ and $U_2$ are two (entangling) operators that act on a quantum system consisting of several qubits. Is there any criterion to tell if these two are equivalent up to applying ...
george doultsinos's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
71 views

What do we mean by causality when we say that entanglement measurements are uncaused? [duplicate]

I’m having a hard time wrapping my head around how the measurement of particle A does not affect the state of an entangled particle B even if no superluminal speeds exist. Suppose Alice makes a ...
user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
89 views

How to interpret Poisson bracket of fields in terms of causality?

In quantum field theory, the fact that space-like separated observables commute, i.e. $[\hat {\phi (x)}, \hat{\phi(y)}]=0$, is taken as the test for causality. The equivalent statement for classical ...
Rain Deer's user avatar
  • 519
0 votes
1 answer
148 views

Newton's second law - local laws and non-local laws

What are local laws? I was reading this line in a book... Newtons second law is a local law. This means that it applies to a particle at a particular instant without taking into consideration any ...
Aditi Bansal's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
22 views

How does locality on space time manifold M put constraints on functions on configuration space of fields?

I am reading David Skinner's notes on AQFT. In Chapter 1 page 3, he mentioned that "purely from the point of view of functions on $C$, locality on $M$ is actually a very strong restriction", ...
Kuro_'s user avatar
  • 11

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