On 7/28/2025 2:43 AM, Alan Grayson wrote:


On Monday, July 28, 2025 at 12:24:33 AM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:



    On 7/27/2025 6:14 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:


    On Sunday, July 27, 2025 at 4:45:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:

        On Sun, Jul 27, 2025 at 6:01 PM Alan Grayson
        <[email protected]> wrote:


            /> What I seek is a mathematical proof that the UP state
            can be written as a linear sum of LT and RT states./

        *Nobody can provide a mathematical proof of that, if it was
        possible mathematicians would have predicted the laws of
        quantum mechanics about the year 1800, maybe earlier. That's
        why physicists need to do experiments, and in this case there
        is a _physical proof_. Suppose I've measured a beam of
        electrons and know they are all spin up. If you're right and
        they are independent qualities then that information will be
        of no help whatsoever in predicting what I will get if I
        decide to measure that beam and see if the electrons in it
        are spin left or spin right, but it is of considerable help.*
        *
        *
        *Thanks to that information I can predict that 50% of the
        electronswill be spin left and 50% will be spin right. And I
        can also predict thatif I decide to recheck the spin left
        particles to make sure they are still spin up I will find
        that they are _NOT_, and the same is true if I measure the
        spin right particles. So I can know if an electron is spin up
        or spin down, _OR_ I can know if an electron is spin left or
        spin right, _BUT_ I can't know both, and I could if they were
        independent qualities. So you're wrong and I'm right, it's as
        simple as that. *

        John K Clark    See what's on my new list at Extropolis
        <https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>


    *I'm not disputing the experimental results, but it's hardly
    obvious that this means UP (or DN) can be written as a linear sum
    of RT and LT as it violates the basic rules of vector spaces. AG*
    It's confusing because the linear sum is in Hilbert space not
    3-space.  In Hilbert space |U> and |D> are not anti-parallel, they
    are orthogonal, <U|D>=0.  There are only 2-dimensions in the
    Hilbert space of a spin 1/2 particle.  So the space is spanned by
    any two orthogonal vectors; so |Left>=(|U>+|D>)/sqrt{2}  and
    |Right=(|U>-|D>)/sqrt{2}.  That's a mathematical proof if you
    believe in Hilbert space.

    Brent


TY. Why are U and D orthogonal? A Hilbert space, IIUC, is like any vector space except that it's complete, meaning that it has a metric and Cauchy sequences converge. AG
Because they're modeling the physical state and the state can't be both |U> and |D>, <U|D>=0.  When you measure along some axis the result must be an eigen vector of the measurement (a repeat measurement must give 100% the same).  So a measurement along an axis (calling it Up and Down is arbitrary) must yield either |U> or |D> as the eigenvector.

Brent

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