- #141
ThomasT
- 529
- 0
ThomasT said:Are you asking whether there are quantum experiments that produce quantum entanglement that aren't specifically designed to be tests of a Bell inequality?
Ok. I would suppose so. But I don't know. DrC, jtbell, et al. can probably answer this for you. Google it.San K said:yes
You asked:
To which I answered:San K said:- why will the photon always pass through exactly 2 of the 3 orientations?
To which you replied:ThomasT said:Don't know what you mean. Photons don't always pass through 2 different orientations. Sometimes the result is 1,0 or 0,1. Anyway, since there are only 2 possible orientations in a given trial, ie., the settings of the polarizers a and b, then what are you referring to by "3" orientations?
Ok, now I know what you mean by the three orientations. These are the θ (the angular difference between polarizer settings) that might be used in a Bell test. They can have any values. Wrt the θ you gave, 120° and 240° are the same θ.San K said:0, 120, 240 <--- three orientations, we'll go step at a time
But your question still isn't clear to me. You said "the photon", singular.
Are you thinking of the "three orientations" as individual polarizer offsets from the horizontal 0° setting?