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vabamyyr
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Can someone explain me Einstein-Podolski-Rosen effect, its nature and why is it happening?
If I interpret these words according to their 'plain' sense, then I am forced to conclude that Bell's inequality is satisfied!caribou said:It turns out that you can just as easily say ... that values of both X and Y for both particles can exist in the appropriate description from the moment the original particle split into the two particles you later measure. This shows that it's a mistake to think that measuring the X or Y property of the first particle forces the other particle to do anything at all.
Can you elaborate on this (... and/or offer a link or a reference)?You can use "complementary" descriptions that have matching 0 and 1 values for the X and Y properties of both particles right from when the start when the original particle split up into the two particles.
It appears to me that I am in the class of just such people. ... What more can you tell me? (A link or a reference is also welcomed.)... (You can also measure one particle for property X and the other for property Y but this gives you random values and doesn't tell you anything useful here. Or so most people think. It is, however, part of the solution to the paradox and I'll get back to this later.)
... This is the what I meant by part of the solution of the paradox was that when you measured the X property of one particle you could also measure the Y property of the other particle but most people didn't think it did anything useful other than produce random values.
Please, inform me: what is this "correct way"? (Again, a link or a reference is also welcomed.)What matching 0 or 1 values the properties X or Y will have in both particles were actually decided the moment the original particle decayed into two particles but this needs to be described in the correct way ...
Eye_in_the_Sky said:But then, you allude to something apparently altogether unknown to me. Can you elaborate on this (... and/or offer a link or a reference)?
DaveC426913 said:I see your 'development' gets at the heart of the one thing that's always troubled me about the theory as it stood until recently:
"...the value of property X or the value of property Y for both particles are not decided until you measure one particle..."
It always starts with the claim that the two particles do not have these properties until you measure them. How do we know this? (Or I should say, how did they know this before this new development).
Thank you for the information and your prompt reply. Severe time constraints prevent me from moving quickly on the matter. However, a preliminary sweep of the topic has brought upon me some creeping suspicions that this interpretation will not find favor in my eyes.caribou said:The interpretation of quantum theory that I'm describing ...
The EPR effect, also known as quantum entanglement, is a phenomenon in quantum mechanics where two or more particles become connected in a way that their states are dependent on each other, even when separated by large distances.
Einstein, Podolski, and Rosen proposed this effect in a 1935 paper as a thought experiment to challenge the completeness of quantum mechanics. They argued that if quantum mechanics was a complete theory, then the EPR effect would violate the principle of locality.
The EPR effect has significant implications for our understanding of the nature of reality and the relationship between space and time. It also has practical applications in quantum cryptography and quantum teleportation.
The principle of locality states that objects that are distant from each other cannot have an immediate effect on each other. However, the EPR effect suggests that two particles can be connected in a way that their states are dependent on each other, regardless of the distance between them.
Yes, the EPR effect has been confirmed through numerous experiments, including the famous Bell test experiments. These experiments have shown that the predictions of quantum mechanics hold true, and the EPR effect is a real phenomenon in nature.