PeterDonis
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Yes, but if there are two beam splitters, the photons can't be put into a Bell state by being both reflected or both transmitted. This seems to me to be an obvious fact about the two different experimental setups. If it creates some sort of problem, I'm not sure what.DrChinese said:the photons arriving at a beam splitter are either both reflected or both transmitted in either scenario.
I think one has to be extremely careful to distinguish what we actually can verify in experiments from what we can't.DrChinese said:I don't think it is really interpretation dependent at this point when describing a delayed choice entanglement swap: it's physical and contradicts any causal explanation (where cause precedes effect).
We can verify in experiments that the initial processes at A and B each produce a pair of particles (one electron and one photon in the OP experiment, two photons in the post #12 "delayed choice" experiment) that, if we just measure them without doing anything else to them, are entangled within each pair, but the pairs are not entangled with each other.
We can verify in experiments that, if we do not do anything to the particles in each pair that are headed for C--i.e., we do not do a BSM or anything else, we just let those photons fly off into the environment and never be heard from again--then measurements of the left-over particles at A and B (the electrons in the OP experiment, or the photons in the post #12 experiment) will show them to be not entangled. We can similarly verify in experiments that if we do separate measurements on the two particles headed for C--such as separate beam splitters for each instead of them both passing through the same one--then, again, measurements of the left-over particles at A and B will show them to be not entangled.
We can verify in experiments that if the two photons at C both pass through a single beam splitter, then we will obtain at C one of two possible results ("event ready" or not) which allow us to separate the results at A and B into two subsets, one of which (the "event ready" one) shows statistics consistent with entanglement of A and B, and the other of which shows statistics consistent with A and B not being entangled.
We can record the times of the A, B, and C measurements, and we can verify that the above statistical results work out the same regardless of the spacetime relationships of those measurements.
We cannot verify in experiments "when the entanglement swap occurs".
We cannot verify in experiments "what the quantum state is" in between the preparations and measurements in the above scenarios.
I'll leave it to you to respond as to whether you think what I've said above is consistent with the statement of yours that I quoted.