How Does Photon Entanglement Influence Light Reflection on Curved Surfaces?

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SUMMARY

This discussion explores the relationship between photon entanglement and light reflection on curved surfaces, emphasizing the concept of surfaces being represented as meshes of flat sections for computational simplicity. The participants question the measurable differences between theoretical models and real-world applications, particularly at a quantum level. They propose that the arrangement of atoms and overall geometry may influence photon paths, suggesting a potential connection between space-time and light behavior. The conversation also touches on the implications of hidden variables in quantum mechanics.

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  • Understanding of photon entanglement and quantum mechanics
  • Familiarity with ray tracing techniques in computer graphics
  • Knowledge of optics and light behavior on curved surfaces
  • Basic concepts of space-time geometry in physics
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  • Research the principles of photon entanglement in quantum mechanics
  • Explore ray tracing algorithms and their applications in rendering curved surfaces
  • Study the effects of geometry on light propagation and reflection
  • Investigate the concept of hidden variables in quantum theory
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Physicists, computer graphics developers, and anyone interested in the intersection of quantum mechanics and optics, particularly in understanding how light interacts with complex geometries.

madhatter106
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thinking about ray tracing from another thread and musing a bit on it I wondered something.

In all cases that I've ever computed curved surfaces the surface is computed as n-number of sections. so in reality it a 'mesh' of flat surfaces. this helps keep it simple from what I can figure and also also helps for resolution scales.

I wondered though, what is the actual measured difference between the math and real world?

This may fall into optics, but I wonder from a quantum scale. is it the photon entanglement that has the light wave reflect off the surface based on the surface geometry? there has to be some kind of information between the photons to have the overall light wave reflect off a surface that is larger than particle, otherwise wouldn't it diffuse no matter the geometry?

Is it possible that overall geometry of anything, the arrangement of the atoms if you will is interconnected in such a way that space time sets the path for the photon? that the particle has no other possible path because of that arrangement? seems like that would violate some laws though.

wait.. would it be more accurate to say that all particles but the photon follow that function? hence the 'hidden variable'?

in order to imagine the above so I could best post it I likened the 'space time' to a body of water and objects in the water displace the water in such a way that the water molecules that make up the waves propagating in the water are connected to the overall geometry. then imagine that the water is something we can not measure and only can measure the individual molecules. - hope that makes some sense.
 
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I guess the main idea would be that - is the overall geometry interconnected in such a way that space time sets the path for the photon/light, or is it the individual photon entanglements?
 

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