zonde said:
Yes they would be moving on "parallel spacetime trajectories". Basically it would sound simpler if I would say that particles can't be at rest in respect to each other.
Ok, back to your question. As you say in classical domain we can have two identical objects at rest in respect to each other. So we can prepare ensemble of identical objects that move along exactly the same trajectory.
But if we talk about QM domain does it hold or no? It seems to me that it doesn't. We have Pauli exclusion principle and Fermi–Dirac statistics. So we can't prepare ensemble of identical particles that move along exactly the same trajectory.
I would say yes. We can prepare such an ensemble. The reason is that most objects can't be described as fermions.
Not all particles are fermions. Some are bosons. The Pauli exclusion principle doesn't apply to bosons. Bosons satisfy Bose-Einsten statistics, not Fermi-Dirac statistics. Mesons and photons are bosons, not Fermions.
A corporate particle made of many entangled fermions could act as a boson. If all the fermions are entangled and if an even number of spins are coupled together, then the corporate particle will act as a boson. A group of such corporate particles would not satisfy either the Pauli exclusion principle or Fermi-Dirac statistics.
Atoms with zero spin belong in this category. Nuclei with zero spin belong in this category. The ground state C60 molecule belongs in this category. Collections of such things are regularly prepared in laboratories around the world.
A corporate particle consisting of incoherent wavicles would act like a classical particle. It would satisfy Maxwell statistics. Of course, this is an approximation. In the limit of an infinite number of incoherent wavicules, a corporate particle acts like a classical body.
This last category probably includes all the common objects that we recognize in the macroscopic world. You and I belong in this category. Planets belong in this category.
The Pauli exclusion principle is satisfied only by a relatively small set of bodies. Most large objects would not satisfy the Pauli exclusion principle. So even taking into account quantum mechanics, massive objects could travel in parallel space-time paths.