Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,643
What if your only goal was to get the particle on Mars to react instantaneously by measuring its twin on Earth, no Bob necessary. You dont care what the results of your measurement is, only that there is a reaction. Could that be used as a control circuit?
No. As I already mentioned, you can only choose whether or not to do the measurement, you can't choose the outcome of the measurement. And while that determines the outcome of any measurement that might take place on mars, if can't MAKE a measurement happen on mars, and since your measurement's outcome is random, so is the outcome on mars. There's no way, even in principle, that anyone on mars can even determine that you performed a measurement until they get a signal from you (propagating at light speed) to tell them that.
So you are saying its kind of like one of those Klein bottles?
No. For a finite (closed) universe, it's like the surface of a sphere whose radius starts at zero and gets bigger over time. The CMB would be photons racing around the surface of the sphere, since the universe is transparent, they'll just keep racing around forever until the universe collapses. For an infinite universe, well, it's infinite, so it doesn't matter how far away you look, you'll never see the end, so the CMB will persist forever.
And that when we look at early galaxy photons we are looking at photons that have "wrapped around"?
In a closed universe, photons might eventually wrap around, but the universe appears to be too big for photons to have already wrapped around (you can test this by looking for mirror, or ghost, images of distant galaxies in the opposite direction from where you observe them).