lightarrow said:
Sorry but in your reply I don't grasp the answer to my question.
It is an insight only...The Wikipedia article I linked to already gives a decent overview. If you only read the brief excerpts above, try the article in total.
Here is another from Brian Cox [physicst]:
"... everything IS connected to everything else."
Interpreting quantum mechanics continues to be a subject of discussions in these forums.An interesting entanglement discussion in these forums revolves around a tv show from physicst Brian Cox...[becox]
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/a-night-with-the-stars-brian-cox-on-telly.561511/
He actually participates in the discussion! Some don't like his model and interpretation, yet he says clearly that's what they teach at Manchester. He posts an excerpt from his book which describes his view of entanglement: [my layman synopsis: everything is entangled, always has been, always will be. Not only that, effects happen in 'no time at all'...are instantaneous. ]
"It seems that we must conclude that the pair of identical electrons in two distant hydrogen atoms cannot have the same energy but we have also said that we expect the electrons to be in the lowest energy level corresponding to an idealised, perfectly isolated hydrogen atom. Both those things cannot be true and a little thought indicates that the way out of the problem is for there to be not one but two energy levels for each level in an idealised, isolated hydrogen atom. That way we can accommodate the two electrons without violating the Exclusion Principle. The difference in the two energies must be very small indeed for atoms that are far apart, so that we can pretend the atoms are oblivious to each other. But really, they are not oblivious because of the tendril-like reaches of the Pauli principle: if one of the two electrons is in one energy state then the other must be in the second, different energy state and
this intimate link between the two atoms persists regardless of how far apart they are...There is an intimacy between the particles that make up our Universe that extends across the entire Universe. ...This is one of the weirdest-sounding conclusions we’ve been led to so far in the book. "
Also see Fredriks post #29 for a critique of the becox 'theory'...Note that whether indistinguishable particles constitute entanglement is also an issue for discussion. In addition, one has to keep in mind that environmental decoherence, interactions with everything else, subdues entanglement.
Please note I am pointing you to the entanglement discussion as a whole, not becox's particular interpretation.
lightarrow said:
I deduce the subject it's not very easy.
Right you are. As is often the case, the math definitions are not readily subject to a single interpretation. What do they mean?? When asked which interpretation of QM he favored, the famous and humorous physicist
Richard Feynman said: "Shut up and calculate."