ҳ

15 December 2016

Can atoms talk to each other? This is the question posed by Swedish radio programme “Vetandets värld”, after the BIG Bell test collected no less than 95 million ones and zeros from more than 109,000 participants, 3,283 of them in Sweden.

No less than 109,046 people got involved all over the world on 30 November, helping researchers to produce random numbers for the BIG Bell test. A total of 3,283 people in Sweden participated, including pupils from an upper secondary school, Katedralskolan, in Linköping.

“The series of ones and zeros were sent to the twelve laboratories around the world that carried out the actual experiments, and they then chose the series that were used,” says Jan-Åke Larsson, professor of information coding at LiU and in charge of the Swedish node of the experiment.

Laws of quantum mechanics 

The objective of the BIG Bell test is to determine once and for all whether the laws of quantum mechanics are valid. If two linked, or entangled, photons are emitted in different directions, they always have opposite polarisations when this is measured. This is true no matter how far apart the photons have become. As soon as we measure the polarisation of one of the photons of the entangled pair, the other photon acquires the opposite polarisation. Several previous experiments using random numbers generated by machines have shown that this is the case.

“Using people as random number generators allows us once and for all to prove that there is no other explanation for this phenomenon than quantum mechanics,” says Jan-Åke Larsson.

We will, however, have to wait for the result of the experiments.

“They’re working hard on the analysis right now, but you have to remember that there are twelve experiments that must all be analysed separately,” he says.

More scientific information (in Swedish) about the experiment can be heard in the radio programme from Vetandets värld.

Read more

Latest news from LiU

Två män, en kvinna.

Hard rock of the year with a touch of LiU voices

The choirs of ҳ have achieved a new musical milestone. At the 2026 Grammis Awards, Ghost was named Best Hard Rock/Metal – where the contribution from LiU’s choirs on the latest album has now been highlighted as part of the success.

kvinna som sitter ute på campus valla.

Jeanne Cilliers is LiU’s Professor of Economic History

"Almost everything we experience today has historical parallels," says Jeanne Cilliers, new professor of economic history at LiU. She is interested in demographic processes such as marriage, fertility and mortality.

A man with glasses is looking at himself in the mirror.

Digital twin could reveal alcohol consumption in crime cases

Using a digital twin, it is possible to predict with greater precision than at present how much alcohol a person has consumed and at what time. The study was conducted by researchers at LiU and the Swedish National Board of Forensic Medicine.