On Wed, Nov 6, 2024 at 4:23 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:
*> An effect between entangled pairs but no information sent? Doesn't make > sense. AG* *It's weird but it does not produce a logical contradiction. Suppose you and I have quantum entangled coins, I stay on earth but you get in your Spaceship and travel at nearly the speed of light for a little over four years to Alpha Centauri, then you slow down and start flipping your coin and I do the same on Earth. We both write down a record of all the heads and tails we got and both of us conclude that the sequences we got are perfectly random. Then you get back in your spaceship and four years later you're back home. And now that you're back we compare our lists of "random" coin flips and we find that the two sequences are identical, we both got the same "random" sequence.* *That's very weird but neither of us noticed anything was strange until you got back, and that took over four years because Alpha Centauri is four light years away. If we try to use our coins discern a message by Morse code with heads meaning a dot and tails meaning a dash it won't work because your coin will only come up the way you want it to 50% of the time. You could of course force your coin to come up heads or tails, but if you did that you would destroy the quantum entanglement because it is very delicate, and then you would just have two ordinary unrelated coins. * *John K Clark See what's on my new list at Extropolis <https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>* tne > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Everything List" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/everything-list/CAJPayv31kCoFjkOCHeyqdg_%3DcqVA2U6PYpQiTKnHyZ0rpowuvw%40mail.gmail.com.

