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by lisper
367 days ago
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> Double slit experiment with one detector has a seemingly impossible phenomenon when the interference pattern disappears without measurement in our branch Then you don't understand quantum mechanics at all. You should read this: https://flownet.com/ron/QM.pdf The TL;DR is that measurement and entanglement are the same phenomenon. A particle can become entangled with a detector even if the detector doesn't register anything. But that is neither here nor there. Why do you get interference with no detectors? Your theory is that a detector at one slit is somehow paired with a "virtual detector" in a parallel branch at the other slit. But why would that "virtual detector" go away when the real detector is removed? Why is it never the case that there is a "virtual detector" at either slit unless there is a real detector at one of them? |
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When you remove detector and start next measurement, you start with your one branch, branches from previous measurements don't affect it, the phenomenon happens during decoherence, nothing happens after it.
Your article explains this with branching without saying the word.