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2 votes
0 answers
50 views

Is it possible that a macroscopic object tends to a separable state without the need for objective collapse?

For a multi-particle system, superposition is in some sense equivalent to entanglement; with the Dirac field being treated as classical under second quantization, for example, we could at least argue ...
Adam Herbst's user avatar
  • 2,475
3 votes
3 answers
221 views

Was Einstein "spooky action at a distance" about entanglement or about wave function collapse?

I've been watching Sabine's videos and this is my understanding: There is no "spooky action at a distance" based simply on entanglement. Entanglement is a correlation. There is no ...
Ray Wood's user avatar
0 votes
4 answers
331 views

Is signal photon independent of idler photon in Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser?

--Diagram from Wikipedia of the experiment of Kim et al. (1999) Original research paper: A Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser I want to know whether the landing position of the signal photon (photon that ...
Duke William's user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
110 views

Simultaneous measurements of two entangled particles [duplicate]

Experimental evidence reject the local hidden variable theory, so let's say quantum mechanics is right and the wave function does instantaneously collapse upon measurement. Suppose we have two ...
Davidson Cheng's user avatar
19 votes
1 answer
7k views

Is my interpretation of the underlying idea behind this 2022 Nobel Prize story “How physicists proved the universe isn’t real” more or less accurate?

I’m not very good at math but I frequently watch PBS Spacetime on YouTube to try to satisfy my curiosity about physics despite that. In a recent video by Dr Ben Miles titled “How Physicists Proved the ...
J.Todd's user avatar
  • 1,821
0 votes
1 answer
119 views

Postulate of wave function collapse and entanglement

Can we say that a measurement on a system of $k$ entangled particles is the cause of the collapse of the wave function into $k$th states simultaneously?
The Tiler's user avatar
  • 1,400
0 votes
1 answer
73 views

Quantum entanglement

Suppose we have two particles with entangled eigenfunctions. Let's say they are in two different regions of space, with different local Hamiltonians. Now we measure one of them, therefore the other. ...
Luis Díaz's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
45 views

Quantum entanglement information through time of collapse

(I've tried my best to find an existing question that asks this question exactly) From what I understand, given two entangled particles, one held by Alice and one by Bob, when a measurement is done by ...
letsgoyeti's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
115 views

Have objective collapse theories been ruled out by recent experiments?

Have objective collapse theories been ruled out by recent experiments, such as the entanglement of macroscopic objects? (vibrating drumheads)
Question69's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
207 views

Will the Hilbert space get expanded when measuring the entangled state?

If I have two electrons that are indistinguishable, as I understand, they are entangled. And the Hilbert space that describes the behavior of this pair of electrons is a subspace of the Tensor product ...
Jack's user avatar
  • 47
0 votes
0 answers
45 views

Has there been experimental evidence that entangled state collapses simultaneously?

If we observe the observable of one particle among two particles which are entangled each other and separated far away, we can determine the value of the other particle’s same observable from the ...
user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
111 views

Detecting collapse using single slit

A collapsed state should act like a particle and a non-collapsed like a wave. Is this statement true? So if you had a single slit and detectors behind it off to the sides... The collapsed state should ...
Aryagm's user avatar
  • 111
4 votes
1 answer
184 views

Does an entangled pair remain entangled after the first measurement?

Consider an entangled pair described by the wavefunction $$\lvert1,0\rangle = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(\lvert\uparrow_1\downarrow_2\rangle-\lvert\downarrow_1\uparrow_2\rangle)$$ in in the $S_z$-basis. If ...
Solidification's user avatar
6 votes
3 answers
335 views

Are combined fermion wavefunctions still antisymmetric after wavefunction collapse?

If we have two electrons in a state $|\psi\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt2}[|\uparrow\downarrow\rangle+|\downarrow\uparrow\rangle]$ and we measure the spin of the first electron to be up, does the wavefunction ...
Alex Gower's user avatar
  • 2,604
0 votes
0 answers
17 views

Identifying Collapse in Wave-function [duplicate]

Is there a machine or instrument which will notify us instantly when the wave-function has collapsed if we have access to only one of the entangled particles? Note that the wave function collapse will ...
Aryagm's user avatar
  • 111
0 votes
3 answers
408 views

Is there a way to detect the collapse in wave function of entangled particles instantaneously? [closed]

Is there a machine or instrument which will notify us instantly when the wave-function has collapsed if we have access to only one of the entangled particles? Note that the wave function collapse will ...
Aryagm's user avatar
  • 111
-2 votes
6 answers
461 views

Problem regarding quantum entanglement and special relativity

So this question is about the strange phenomenon of quantum entanglement, or "spooky action at a distance", as Einstein called it. In particular, it's about the simplest conceivable case of ...
User3141's user avatar
  • 863
2 votes
0 answers
68 views

Wave function collapse for experimental quantum state preparation

Has the John von Neumann projection, or the wave function collapse, been used in the experimental preparation of quantum states? As an illustration, for a pair of EPR-type entangled 2-level atoms $$|\...
user36125's user avatar
  • 346
1 vote
1 answer
67 views

Is there anyway to know when the wave function collapse?

If we get 2 entangled particles and move them away from each other, is there a way to put one of them is some kind of "sensor" that would tell if the entangled particle have been measured? If yes, how ...
Caio Keto's user avatar
  • 141
3 votes
1 answer
222 views

Can we tell if a particle has collapsed due to a measurement?

Suppose we have two electrons A and B. My friend measure the spin on electron B the value is +1/2, and he writes on a piece of a paper the value. Electron A has not been measured, so the spin is in ...
Stefano Balzarotti's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
139 views

If I have a two-electron problem, and I measure the position of one electron. What happens to the quantum description of the other?

Suppose I have a two-electron system, and they are left alone for a long time, such that I do not know where each of them is. I then measure one electron at position $\vec r_1$. Does this collapse the ...
Mikkel Rev's user avatar
  • 1,356
5 votes
2 answers
519 views

Does Quantum Entanglement have a preferred reference frame?

What I mean by this is, with wave function collapse,--and by extension, collapse between two entangled particles--being nonlocal (instantaneous across space), in what reference frame does the ...
Sciencemaster's user avatar
-1 votes
2 answers
134 views

When does quantum entanglement cease?

On Wikipedia on Quantum entanglement: “However, this behavior gives rise to seemingly paradoxical effects: any measurement of a property of a particle performs an irreversible collapse on that ...
michael's user avatar
  • 259
0 votes
0 answers
123 views

Instantaneous quantum features

Two of the most striking quantum oddities are entanglement and the wave-function collapse or state vector reduction. Firstly, quantum entanglement is the quantum phenomena involving states of ...
riemannium's user avatar
  • 6,611
6 votes
4 answers
2k views

Doesn't the Schrödinger's cat inside the box cause the probability wave function to collapse long before a human opens the box?

My point is that there is no superposition of dead and alive. The cat will cause the probability function to collapse long before we open the box. What am I missing here? Isn't the cat capable of ...
Eddie Bravo's user avatar
-3 votes
2 answers
167 views

Does Quantum Entanglement happen between two wavefunctions? [closed]

Does the entanglement happen between two particles or two wavefunctions? If it's wavefunction then what happens to the two wavefuntions after getting entangled?
Viswa Vijeta's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
205 views

Annihilation Operator on Entangled State - How Does This Not Break No-Communication Theorem?

If I have the state $$|\psi\rangle=\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\left(|2\rangle_{A}|0\rangle_{B}+|0\rangle_{A}|2\rangle_{B}\right)$$ and apply the annihilation operator to B $$a_{B}|\psi\rangle=|\phi\rangle=\...
Jack's user avatar
  • 379
1 vote
2 answers
482 views

Does entangled states must become non entangled states after the measurement?

In tensor notation. A state vector $|uv\rangle$ is a tensor product(non entangled states) if and only if there is $A\in E_1(u)$ and $B\in E_2(v)$ such that $A\otimes B$. So by postulate of quantum ...
J C's user avatar
  • 1,048
1 vote
1 answer
176 views

Wave function collapse, EPR paradox and information transfer

For a classical formulation of the EPR paradox, two particles are produced, with total momentum zero and separated by a long distance. So say we measure the momentum of one particle first, and measure ...
Ilya  Lapan's user avatar
  • 1,171
14 votes
3 answers
3k views

When light reflects off a mirror, does the wave function collapse?

This question is specific to the Copenhagen interpretation, which states that the wave function collapses on interaction. If we have a beam of light reflected off a mirror, whether you see this light ...
safesphere's user avatar
  • 12.7k

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