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atyy
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Demystifier said:I haven't seen the debate on this forum, but I can present a simple reason why the Ballentine's experiment is NOT a measurement of momentum p_y. The point is that in this experiment p_y is NOT MEASURED but CALCULATED. Measurement and calculation are not the same. A calculation always contains an additional theoretical assumption which a true measurement does not need to use.
More specifically, p_y is calculated as
p_y = p sin theta
and this equation is correct only if one ASSUMES that the particle has been moving along a definite straight trajectory and with a constant momentum before it hitted the detector (at position y = L tg theta). However, since such a trajectory has not been measured, there is no theory-independent justification for such an assumption.
If, on the other hand, one accepts the Ballentine's experiment as a valid measurement of momentum, then it is equivalent to an acceptance of the idea that particles may have trajectories even when they are not measured. That's fine, as long as one is aware that we do not have a direct experimental confirmation that this idea is correct. Indeed, the trajectory tacitly assumed in the Ballentine's experiment exactly coincides with the Bohmian trajectory. It is well known that Bohmian trajectories are consistent with QM, and yet that a direct experimental verification of their reality does not exist.
So, loosely speaking, one could say that the Ballentine's measurement of p_y assumes that the Bohmian interpretation is right, even if he is not aware of it.
Is your objection in the same spirit as Bell's comment https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3428572&postcount=89, ie. a measurement should be able to measure based on arbitrary states, not only a special class of states (ie. if we know the state already, then we can measure everything without measurement, so it should be prohibited from having any knowledge of the state for a procedure to be called measurement)?