raagamuffin said:
If two particles get entangled, can one measure the momentum of one and position of the other (simultaneously), thereby violating Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, or are these totally different concepts?
A very similar 'experiment' is often used to describe the EPR experiment and Bell inequalities.
Instead of looking at the momentum and position, let's look at the spin of the particles. You can measure the spin in (for example) the z-direction, or in the x-direction. The HUP however does not allow you to know the spin in both directions simultaneously. If you measure the spin of a particle in the z-direction, you get a certain value (up or down). If you then measure it in the x-direction, you again get either up or down. But now, the spin in the z-direction is completely random again! You cannot know both spins at the same time.
Now let's take two entangled particles and send one to experimenter 1 (often called Alice or A), and the other to experimenter 2 (Bob or B). Suppose that the entangled particles require one of them to be spin up, and the other to be spin down.
If Alice measures her particle in the z-direction, and finds spin up, then Bob will find his particle to have spin down in the z-direction (and vice-versa).
You may ask a similar question now:
If Alice measures her particle's spin in the z-direction, and Bob in the x-direction, wouldn't that imply that both know their particle's spins in
both the x and z directions? Since, when Alice measures her spin in the z-direction to be up, Bob knows that his must be down. So he measures the spin in the x-direction: viola, he now knows both the z and x direction! Likewise, Bob can now tell Alice what he measured in the x-direction, and Alice knows her spin in the x-direction as well (while she already knew it in the z-direction).
If this is true, that would violate the HUP. Luckily, this doesn't work.
When Alice measures her spin in the z-direction, Bob can indeed know the spin of his particle in the z-direction. However! As soon as he measures his spin in the x-direction, he loses all information about the spin in the z-direction! The spin in his z-direction is again completely random (and the particles are no longer entangled). So he can
claim that he now knows both his x and z spin; but if you would ask him to verify his claim (by repeating the measurement of x and z spin) he would find (approximately half the time) that he was wrong!