Fredrik said:
I think we have to define what we mean by a "momentum measurement" in this situation
Yes, I think this is what we are discussing, and I was proposing something in the direction.
Fredrik said:
I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. What do you mean by "spread of the information set"? If you're talking about the width of the wavefunction after the detection, how could it be larger than the detector?
I think by detector you mean the resolution of the detectors at the wall.
But IMO, the entire slit setup is part of the "detector", simply because in this "generalized" "measurement" where we also try to infer momentum, the inference depends on the entire setup, inlucing L. So I think
in the case where we try to as you say, define or generalized some kind of inference of p_y in parallell to infering y, the entire setup is the "detector" IMO. The actuall counter on the wall does not alone allow infering p_y.
Fredrik said:
So I want to use a definition that implies that the value of py that's inferred from the y measurement is only an approximate measurement, and that the inaccuracy of the y measurement isn't the only thing that contributes to the total error. There's also a contribution that depends on L (and goes to zero when L goes to zero) that must be added to the contribution from the inaccuracy in the y measurement.
Since the error depends on L, it should grow at least linearly with L. So I want to define a "momentum measurement with minimum error L" as a y measurement at x coordinate L, followed by a calculation of py. Maybe that should be "with minimum error kL", where k is some number, but right now I don't know what number that would be, so I'm just setting it to 1.
Why would the uncertainy of the inference increase with L? It seems to be the other way around? Holding
\delta y fixed, and increasing L, decreases \delta \theta and thus the error?
OTOH, since this "inference" is defined with respect to a time interval where the particle goes from the slit input to a detector cell, the mathcing uncertainty in y loosely speaking "conjugating with this momentum inference" should be L sin \theta.
Also; I'm not thinking in terms of wavefunctions here. I'm thinking in terms of information state; this information state is inferred. I don't think it's consistent to at the same time thinkg that [\Delta y \approx \delta y and have confidence in an inference in p_y that DEPDENDS on a path or transition through the slit construction Lsin \theta. I think it's an inconsistent inference.
I'm just suggesting that I think that if you DO insist in the inference like you do, then I think we need to acknowledge that the uncertaint in y is also a function of L. This is IMO the consequence of L you might seek.
/Fredrik