| Lets define experiment as following (excuse me my bad English, please): - vibrating bath with non-conductive, non-magnetic, non-paramagnetic, non-diamagnetic fluid; - vibrating bath is wide enough to avoid excessive interference with reflected waves from bath sides; - vibrating bath has regular pattern on top of fluid, without any irregularities in space of experiment; - small charged droplets of fluid on top of bath; - north and south poles of a magnet are placed horizontally, without touching of bath fluid or droplets, e.g. at sides of bath, OR over fluid, OR under bath; - an apparatus creates droplets of same size with random spin in all 3 dimensions; - droplets are forced to walk through the batch, starting at center line between north and south pole and following that line; - without magnetic field applied, droplets must walk straight; - an detectors to measure decline of droplet path from center line must be installed at end of magnetic pole. I expect that, when magnetic field is applied, droplets will slide completely to left or completely to the right, like electrons in Stern-Gerlach experiment. It's not a quantum experiment, of course, but it can provide insight on nature of quantum spin. PS. Sorry, droplets must be charged, not magnetic. Updated. |
The pilot wave usually refers to the spatial degrees of freedom, especially in these classical mock-ups with balls on top of waves. They do not properly addressed internal degrees of freedom like spin.
Unrelated to those macroscopic mock-ups, pilot wave theory actually has serious problems with the description of anything that is not a spatial degree of freedom.
You can still use pilot wave theory to describe the quantum behavior of the coordinates of a particle. But even then, the classical mock-ups we are discussing will not show anything inherently quantum - it will simply produce some interference patterns, that can be explained classically.
P.S. side note: An important part in the Stern-Gerlach experiment was that the magnetic field was not homogeneous, because it is the gradient of the field, not the field itself that causes the electrons to move.