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Standard Bell inequalities apply to correlations arising when two or more macroscopically separated systems are each subjected to a single ideal measurement. While these inequalities demonstrate that quantum mechanics and local hidden variable theories yield incompatible predictions for pure states, they fail for mixed states: For mixed states, correlations arising from a single ideal measurement on each system may obey standard Bell inequalities, yet when each system is subjected to a sequence of ideal measurements the correlations are nonlocal. For some situations even this last procedure fails, and we must consider more complex (``nonideal'') measurements.
Sandu Popescu (Mon,) studied this question.
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