PhysRev 48 696 PDF
PhysRev 48 696 PDF
PhysRev 48 696 PDF
PH
Can Quantum-Mechanical
YSICAL REVIEW
VOLUM E 48
Copenhagen
It is shown that a certain "criterion of physical reality" formulated in a recent article with
the above title by A. Einstein, B. Podolsky and N. Rosen contains an essential ambiguity
when it is applied to quantum phenomena. In this connection a viewpoint termed "complementarity" is explained from which quantum-mechanical
description of physical phenomena
would seem to fulfill, within its scope, all rational demands of completeness.
-- Einstein, B.
"
"
777 (1935).
' Cf. N. Bohr, Atomic Theory and Description of Nature, I
(Cambridge, 1934),
= (ogp2 j = ik/2m,
P&P23
Qlp2
o2pl
g2
cos 8 Qp sin 8
Ql sin 8+Q2 cos 8
= Qy
P&
p2
| Q,P, j=ihi2,
commutation
[Q,P, g=o
it follows that in the description of the state of the combined system definite numerical values may not be assigned to both Q& and P&, but that we may clearly assign
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QUANTUM
MECHANICS
AND
PHYSICAL REALITY
P2
p~ sin 8+p2 cos 8,
p2 will allow
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investigation, in the sense that the quantummechanical uncertainty relations regarding its
position and momentum must be taken explicitly
into account. In fact, even if we knew the position of the diaphragm relative to the space frame
before the first measurement of its momentum,
and even though its position after the last measurement can be accurately fixed, we lose, on
account of the uncontrollable displacement of
the diaphragm during each collision process with
the test bodies, the knowledge of its position
when the particle passed through the slit. The
is therefore obviously unwhole arrangement
suited to study the same kind of phenomena as
in the previous case. In particular it may be
shown that, if the momentum of the diaphragm
is measured with an accuracy sufficient for allowing definite conclusions regarding the passage of
the particle through some selected slit of the
second diaphragm, then even the minimum uncertainty of the position of the first diaphragm
compatible with such a knowledge will imply the
total wiping out of any interference effect regarding the zones of permitted impact of the
particle on the photographic plate to which the
presence of more than one slit in the second
diaphragm would give rise in case the positions
of all apparatus are fixed relative to each other.
In an arrangement suited for measurements of
the momentum of the first diaphragm, it is further clear that even if we have measured this
momentum before the passage of the particle
through the slit, we are after this passage still
left with a, free choice whether we wish to know
the momentum of the particle or its initial position relative to the rest of the apparatus. In
the first eventuality we need only to make a
second determination of the momentum of the
diaphragm, leaving unknown forever its exact
position when the particle passed. In the second
its
we need only to determine
eventuality
the
with
frame
the
to
space
relative
position
inevitable loss of the knowledge of the momentum exchanged between the diaphragm and
the particle, If the diaphragm is sufficiently
massive in comparison with the particle, we may
even arrange the procedure of measurements in
such a way that the diaphragm after the first
determination of its momentum will remain at
rest in some unknown position relative to the
QUANTUM
ECHANI CS AND
PHYSICAL
REALITY
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QUANTUM
MECHANICS
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REALITY
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arrangements,
which had to be left out of this article,
where the main stress is laid on the dialectic aspect of the
question at issue.