At the creation of a pair of entangled particles we can say that the time of creation for each photon is equal, that is for a pair of entangled photons p1 and p2
te1 = te2 = 0
where ten is the creation time of photon n.
Here we’re going to use a slightly modified spacetime diagram, in this spacetime diagram the x axis and y axis represent the spatial dimensions and the time axis, ct, is the z axis perpendicular to the (x, y) plane. The z dimension is suppressed to help us picture what is going on.
Picture the two entangled photons as created at the point (0, 0, 0) and they go in opposite directions along the x axis. So for our entangled photons p1 and p2 we can say at the time of emission
(x1, y1) = (x2, y2) = (0, 0)
And also
(dx1/dy1) = (dx2/dy2)
Here is the extra step – our time axis is not a plane but a line. What does that mean? Well it means for each event en we define it’s spatial and temporal co-ordinates not as (x, y, t) but (x, y) and (t) that is we plot the path of an object through time as a line in the (x, y) plane and a different line ‘up’ the time axis. If your spacetime diagram is on a page our path through time can be represented as a line coming out of the page. All objects move ‘up’ the time axis at the same rate, c.
A consequence of this is that for our entangled pair of photons they travel ‘up’ the time line together, at least until one of them experiences an event. Or to put it another way at any time tn the two photons will be on the t axis at the same point. Any objects that are created at the same time and at the same spatial dimension are ‘touching’ in time and can, and indeed will, influence the other when a conserved property of one changes, the follows directly from the conservation principle.
Another way to look at it is that the photons share a clock from the event of their creation until one of them experiences another event. Indeed for every event you can consider that a unique point is created on the t axis which ‘moves’ up the t axis. This point is our clock and any objects that share a clock will influence each other, objects will no longer share a clock when they experience another event.
Does this make sense to anyone? We have a violation of locality but only for a very special subset of events where time and space are exactly equal. This is very rare in the universe hence we do not see locality violated often. We also cannot violate causality – the only direction you can go in time is ‘up’ the time axis so even though we have faster than light influence we can’t go back in time at all.
te1 = te2 = 0
where ten is the creation time of photon n.
Here we’re going to use a slightly modified spacetime diagram, in this spacetime diagram the x axis and y axis represent the spatial dimensions and the time axis, ct, is the z axis perpendicular to the (x, y) plane. The z dimension is suppressed to help us picture what is going on.
Picture the two entangled photons as created at the point (0, 0, 0) and they go in opposite directions along the x axis. So for our entangled photons p1 and p2 we can say at the time of emission
(x1, y1) = (x2, y2) = (0, 0)
And also
(dx1/dy1) = (dx2/dy2)
Here is the extra step – our time axis is not a plane but a line. What does that mean? Well it means for each event en we define it’s spatial and temporal co-ordinates not as (x, y, t) but (x, y) and (t) that is we plot the path of an object through time as a line in the (x, y) plane and a different line ‘up’ the time axis. If your spacetime diagram is on a page our path through time can be represented as a line coming out of the page. All objects move ‘up’ the time axis at the same rate, c.
A consequence of this is that for our entangled pair of photons they travel ‘up’ the time line together, at least until one of them experiences an event. Or to put it another way at any time tn the two photons will be on the t axis at the same point. Any objects that are created at the same time and at the same spatial dimension are ‘touching’ in time and can, and indeed will, influence the other when a conserved property of one changes, the follows directly from the conservation principle.
Another way to look at it is that the photons share a clock from the event of their creation until one of them experiences another event. Indeed for every event you can consider that a unique point is created on the t axis which ‘moves’ up the t axis. This point is our clock and any objects that share a clock will influence each other, objects will no longer share a clock when they experience another event.
Does this make sense to anyone? We have a violation of locality but only for a very special subset of events where time and space are exactly equal. This is very rare in the universe hence we do not see locality violated often. We also cannot violate causality – the only direction you can go in time is ‘up’ the time axis so even though we have faster than light influence we can’t go back in time at all.