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52 sats \ 1 reply \ @south_korea_ln 5 Jun \ on: How quantum entanglement really works and why we accept its weirdness science
It's kinda implied in this article, but worth emphasizing that quantum entanglement doesn't mean information can be transferred at a speed greater than the speed of light. If you are measuring the state of entagled particle B, you would still need to check the state of particle A by obtaining it through "classical" means, i.e. someone at particle A would need to inform you of its state, whose communication means are bound by the speed of light.
Exactly. I never quite understood the supposed paradox here.
Logical inference in one place about something happening in another is not the same thing as communication between the two places.
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