Michael Horne (physicist)

Michael A. Horne (* January 18, 1943, in Gulfport, Mississippi; † January 19, 2019)[1] was an American quantum physicist, famous for his work on the foundations of quantum mechanics.

Michael Horne
Born1943
Died2019
NationalityUnited States
Alma materUniversity of Mississippi
Boston University
Known forQuantum Entanglement
Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger state
CHSH inequality
Scientific career
FieldsPhysicist
InstitutionsStonehill College
Doctoral advisorAbner Shimony

Horne studies at the University of Mississippi and earned his doctorate in physics at the Boston University with Abner Shimony. He taught at the Stonehill College, a catholic school in Easton in the south of Boston.

Together with John Clauser, Abner Shimony and Richard A. Holt he developed the CHSH inequality for experimentally testing Bell's theorem (the test has been conducted in 1972 by John Clauser and Stuart Freedman). In 1975 he started to investigate neutron interferometry in collaboration with Clifford Shull at the MIT (at these days, neutron interference experiments have been developed by Sam Werner at the University of Missouri and by Helmut Rauch and Anton Zeilinger at the University of Vienna). This led to an encounter with Daniel Greenberger, who had already theoretically proposed neutron interferometry for gravitation in the 1960s and was also interested in Shull's experiment, and later with Zeilinger (in Grenoble 1978).

With Daniel Greenberger and Anton Zeilinger in 1989 he introduced quantum entangled states of three subsystems (Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger states).,[2] which was first experimentally realized in 1998[3] and represents a conceptual improvement over experiments based on Bell's inequality, as the violation with local realism was now a deterministic consequence predicted by quantum physics. GHZ states were the first examples of quantum entanglement with more than two particles and play a fundamental role in quantum information theory.

Selected works

  • with J. Clauser, Abner Shimony, Richard Holt: Proposed experiment to test local hidden variable theories. In: Physical Review Letters. Band 23, 1969, S. 880.
  • with J. Clauser: Experimental consequences of objective local theories. In: Physical Review D. Band 10, 1974, S. 526

References

  1. The Boston Globe: Michael Horne
  2. Greenberger, Horne, Zeilinger, Going beyond Bell's Theorem, in: M. Kafatos (Ed.), Bell's Theorem, Quantum Theory, and Conceptions of the Universe, Kluwer, Dordrecht, 1989, pp. 69–72, Arxiv
  3. Dik Bouwmeester, Jian-Wei Pan, Matthew Daniell, Harald Weinfurter, Anton Zeilinger: Observation of three-photon Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger entanglement, Phys . Rev. Lett., Volume 82, 1999, pp. 1345–1349, Arxiv
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