Demystifier
Science Advisor
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The only version of Copenhagen which answers "what happens" type of questions is the collapse interpretation. So here I will use this version (vanhees71, please don't read it!).A. Neumaier said:I am still hoping for atyy or someone else to address what the Copenhagen interpretation says in the context of my post #1.
In particular, since pure states play a distinguished role in the Copenhagen interpretation, I'd like to know whether each individual particle is in a pure state after leaving the source? How is this state assigned or tested?
Is the filter a measurement in the sense of your version of the Copenhagen interpretation? If so, what does your version of the Copenhagen interpretation assert about state and properties of the single particle in the three cases (a), (b), (c)? If not, what happens to the state of a particle when passing the filter?
Still, we have two different versions. In one version, collapse happens only when a conscious observer observes. In another version, collapse happens whenever interaction with a macroscopic apparatus takes place. For definiteness, I will use the latter version.
So here is what happens according to this version of CI:
(a) At the moment of emission, wave function collapses into a state with a definite spin in some random direction.
(b) At the filter the wave function is either destroyed (which can also be thought of as a kind of collapse) or collapses into a state with a definite spin in the direction defined by the filter.
(c) At the measurement the wave function is destroyed (provided that it was not already destroyed at the filter) and the measuring apparatus collapses into a state of a definite outcome of spin measurement.