SpectraCat said:
Ok, I have a (hopefully simple) question about the issue of using entangled pairs to transmit a signal. Say we have Alice and Bob, and are they measuring entangled photon pairs, with a normal communication channel to compare results. Say they conduct the following idealized experiment:
1) The source of entangled pairs is placed at some fixed location, with detection facilities for the two beams located one light minute in opposite directions along the beam path. There is also a normal communication line connecting the two facilities for comparison of results, although it will clearly take 2 minutes for signal transmission.
2) The source is configured such that it emits entangled pairs at a rate of 1 per second.
3) The detectors are "passive" .. by this I simply mean that they measure every particle when it arrives, so there is no question of delayed choice. I have in mind something like the (ideal) switched-polarization detectors described in the Aspect paper.
4) Alice and Bob synchronize their clocks while together at the source, leave at the same time, and travel at the same speed to their measurement locations.
5) At some agreed upon time measured relative to their synchronized starting time, they begin taking photon polarization measurements, and stop after precisely 1 minute, at which point they have 60 measurements.
Now, my question is, when they compare results over their normal communication line, what will they observe? On the one hand, the Aspect paper (and subsequent experiments) indicate that there should be a 100% correlation between their sets of measurements (assuming ideal equipment). On the other hand, doesn't relativity say that Alice and Bob cannot be sure that their sets of measurements are time-correlated? That is to say, Alice can't be sure that the measurements she took at t=1s and t=2s happened in the same relative order for Bob at his measurement site?
If the latter statement is true, then it seems that the two measurement sets should be uncorrelated. However if they *are* correlated, then it seems like that might be developed into some sort of FTL communication device, using a some sort of clever protocol involving repeated measurements. (I have some ideas about how this might work, but I want to make sure my understanding of the experiment I described is correct.)
So, have I made a mistake in defining the parameters of the experiment? The thing I am most unsure about is the implied synchronization of the start times in step 5. Alice and Bob both use time measuring devices that travel with them at all times, so the synchronization seems to on the face of it to be possible under SR. However, I am not sure that SR allows Alice and Bob to be completely sure that they really started their measurements at the same time.
Or do I just have a fundamental misunderstanding(s) somewhere about what QM and relativity predict in these two cases.
The difficulty here is that we are still trying to describe an EPR-like experiment in classical terms. This quantum experiment has certain characteristics, first discussed by Bohr, that make it radically different from a classical experiment.
First: Any quantum experiment requires a measurement result. This gives closure to the event. There is no experiment to discuss until the detector is triggered.
Second: If changes are made during the “run”, then the results, and the statistical distribution of those results, correspond to the experimental configuration in place at the instant the detector is triggered. It doesn’t matter when the changes are made. Quantum mechanics does not pretend to describe anything that might be happening before particle detection.
Third: The entire experimental apparatus, including the particle source, the preparation apparatus, the measuring device, and the measurement result is a single entity with no classical analog. The different parts of the experiment, including the two photons, do not act independently of each other. This property is known as the Non-Separability Principle of Quantum Mechanics.
The entangled pair, the entire apparatus, and the detection facilities are non-separable. Time and distance are irrelevant parameters! We should not be discussing the “two (detection) facilities” as if they were independent of each other. In fact, all the information obtained from this “entanglement” experiment requires only one detector.
Assume that we are measuring linear polarization. There are two possible results:
Result 1: particle A is x polarized and particle B is y polarized.
Result 2: particle A is y polarized and particle B is x polarized.
Result 1, and Result 2 also, is a single result. If particle A is x polarized, then we know automatically that particle B is y polarized, even without measuring it! Particle A - x polarized and particle B - y polarized always go together as a single result. Bob could be at lunch with his detector turned off. It doesn’t matter. If Alice had an ideal measuring device that yielded Result 1, then it would display “x” for particle A and “y” for particle B simultaneously at the instant her detector is triggered.
To do the coincidence measurement required to test relativity, you must somehow do a time of flight measurement on each photon in the pair. This means that each photon must be treated separately and have its own trajectory. But, it is now well established that quantum particles do not have trajectories like classical particles do. Wheeler has insisted that a quantum experiment does not describe the behavior of any photons traveling from the source to the detector. But, if we still demand that each photon does travel in such a classical way, as is done in the original EPR paper, then our calculations yield erroneous results in disagreement with real experiments.
The detectors need not trigger simultaneously. Nor do we need two detectors to obtain all the information yielded by this experiment.
The only time of importance to us is the instant that the first detector is triggered. That first detection event fixes everything. The experiment is over and done. If you then record a later event in the second detector, then this will only confirm the first result, but in no way does it change the result already obtained.
We cannot test the special theory of relativity with EPR-like experiments and it is now generally accepted that quantum mechanics is incompatible with such experiments. The fallacy lies in our attempt to apply classical principles to a non-classical experiment where they do not apply.
Best wishes.