akhmeteli said:
Thank you very much for the reference.
For the benefit of others: as far as I could understand, the experiment in the cited paper (I guess there is a version in arxiv as well) demonstrates the Bell inequalities with the detection loophole closed. The locality loophole is still there big way though: to close it, they need to increase the spatial separation from 1 m to 15 km. Thus, it looks like the general conclusion still stands: there has been no experimental proof of nonlocality so far (44 years since the Bell's article), and I don't hold my breath waiting for such proof. And not just because of experimental difficulties or because local realism is any relative of mine, but because, for reasons outlined in my post #6 in this thread, such proof would mean that unitary evolution of quantum theory is not universal. And this may be too big for me to swallow.
At some point, you need to step back and look at the body of evidence here.
There's a whole slew of experiments that have closed the locality loophole. All of them involved photons.
There's another slew of experiment that have closed the detection loophole. All of them involved some form of particles, from protons, neutrons, muons, etc.
Now, you are telling me that, somehow, each one of the still "open" loophole conspires to make themselves be THE factor that can still account for the apparent violation of Bell inequality. Don't you just find that to be rather a very unlikely coincidence?
There's another glaring aspect of this.
All, and I mean 100%, of the experiments on Bell inequality all make the same claim of the violation. Now, one would think that someone who isn't convinced of this, or who is claiming that such-and-such a loophole is responsible for the apparent violation, would at least be able to conduct his/her own experiment, show the data, and argue conclusively that others who have performed the experiment have erroneously analyzed the data, and that the <insert favorite loophole here> loophole is there, in the data. Now, can you find me such an experimental report? I have found
none. Don't you find this rather curious? Why is that?
I will tell you why. In the detection loophole, for instance, even without a 100% efficiency in photon detection, people who do such experiments have to first of all learn about the behavior of their detectors. Everyone who depends on any form of photodetectors have to do this, including high energy experimentalists. We need to know how these instruments behave, what they can do, and more importantly, what they can't do. We need to know when the data we have is reliable, and when we are over-reaching.
So when experiments involving entangled photons are performed, even without a 100% efficiency, we have an excellent idea of the performance of the detectors to say with reasonable confidence of what the actual data are. To me, it is why you have never, ever seen such experiments that contradict the conclusion of violation of local realism so far. It is because once you learn and understand the behavior of such detectors, you'd never pay attention to the weak "detection loophole" argument. The argument against the validity of a data set can only be made by experts not only in the physics, but also in the detection scheme. When Talayerkhan claimed to detect fusion in his bubble fusion experiment, his detractors were not someone who have no clue on the experimental method he was doing. In fact, many of them were world-renowned experts in neutron detections, and they pointed out exactly where the device he's using and the method he adopted can easily produced faulty results. This then threw a lot doubt in the data and subsequently the conclusion (I haven't yet mentioned the fact that others who tried to reproduce the experiment did not get the same result). I have never seen that done with any of the Bell experiments done so far. Considering that there have been plenty of such experiment, and with 100% agreement on the conclusion, I find the lack of contradicting experimental results to be a very obvious shortcoming of those who claim otherwise.
So to me, the continued stubbornness in proclaiming that local realism is still valid because this loophole is still open, or that loophole is still open, has nothing to do with not having convincing experiments. That's like saying Evolution isn't true simply because there are still "gaps" in our knowledge, or that QM isn't right because it still can't be reconciled with GR. It rings hollow because of what they all CAN do already, whereas the alternative have done nothing. All the experiments have produced ONE very convincing argument in favor of violation of non-local realism per the Bell theorem. That is what all these papers have argued and concluded. The paper that I had recently cited simply tried to start hammering down the last nail in the coffin - by being the first to attempt at closing BOTH locality and detection loophole simultaneously. The alternative, being local realism via the non-violation of Bell inequality, have ... er ... zero experimental evidence!
Zz.