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I'll bite the bullet and try to explain it in layman's terms (with not attempt at rigor): When you measure particle A, something happens to particle B. Unfortunately, particle B always has 2 potential outcomes (let's say, with 50% chance of being RED and 50% chance of being BLUE). So when you measure B, you find "B is red", or "B is blue". Now when you measure particle A, imagine you change the probabilities for B remotely to 90%/10%. But when you're the guy at B, and you machine say "RED!" ... did that just happen because A changed the likelyhood, or did it happen because, well, there was a 50/50 chance of it happening? It is more subtle than that, but that's the gist of why you can't send information. (yes when you repeat the experiment and A and B compare their results, the probabilities have changed, but for a single measurement you never know if you got it by chance or if you got it because A did something). |
Couldn't that be the signal? For example, one person could tell the other: "When B resolves, press the button!" It wouldn't matter if B resolved to red or blue.
Is it that we cannot detect whether B is in a superposition state without observing it and therefore resolving its state to one 'position' or the other?
(I hope I'm not the only one on HN with an incomplete understanding of current quantum theory.)