• Wigners_friend@piefed.social
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    4 months ago

    Positrons don’t move backwards in time in any physical sense. Their mathematical representation is like an electron with a negative time coordinate but this is physically dubious because it fails in curved spacetimes. Electron-positron pairs are entangled because they are correlated by the process that created the pair. Entanglement is just a correlation, not some magical link.

    • MysteriousSophon21@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Entanglement is more than just a classical correlation though - it’s specifically the kind where the quantum states can’t be described independently, which is why Bell’s inequalites get violated and why Einstein called it “spooky action at a distanc”.

      • Wigners_friend@piefed.social
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        3 months ago

        It’s stronger than a classical one, yes. But Einstein’s description is mocking the idea of entanglement as an active link that allows distant states to be changed by local actions.

  • CeffTheCeph@kbin.earth
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    8 days ago

    If an electron were to become exposed to a positron in a manner within which they could become entangled, they would annihilate. The resultant photons would be entangled, but their respective energy/momentum values would depend on the incoming electron/positron momentum/energy values.