Heinera wrote:Ok. So if the initial state was zero angular momentum, and the measured angular momentums of the two wings did not add up to zero, angular momentum would still somehow be conserved?
In Joy's experiment, we observe the two colourful spinning hemispheres with video cameras or other sensors, do a lot of image analysis, and come up, in the k'th run, k = 1, ..., N, with two directions of angular momentum denoted s_k and minus s_k. So in the processing of the data (the video films) we *assume* conservation of angular momentum.
We do this N times and store the N directions s_k in a computer file.
Then we pick directions a and b and compute A_k(a) = sign(a . s_k) and B_k(b) = sign(b . - s_k). The "dot" here standing for inner product, thinking of these directions as unit vectors in R^3. Presumably the directions a, b and s_k will be represented in our computer software by two angles (inclination and azimuth), see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_coordinate_system, but any representation will do.
Then we calculate E(a, b) = 1/N sum_k A_k(a) B_k(b).
Now we pick some other pairs of directions, and repeat. Joy has repeatedly told us that we can use the same set of N directions of angular momentum +/- s_k, k=1, ..., N, for each pair of measurement directions a, b.
Do take a look at Joy's short experimental paper
http://arxiv.org/abs/0806.3078, or (just Section 4 of) the longer paper
http://arxiv.org/abs/1211.0784. Everything is written out very explicitly in both places, exactly the same instructions.
To be precise, the directions +/- s_k are the directions of spin at the moment the hemispheres reach a certain distance from their initial location. The computation involved here is the reconstruction of the actual (classical) motion of a spinning flying object from a number of video films of the object, taken from different angles. Joy thinks it would help to do the experiment in zero gravity and in a vacuum but probably it will work out OK in ordinary terrestrial conditions. Joy says there will be no "non-detections". But it doesn't matter since we either get a +/- s_k or we don't. The measurement directions a and b have zero influence on the detection.
Basically we are *measuring* the local hidden variable s_k and then only after that, *deducing* the measurement outcomes by plugging in our estimate of s_k.
Betting on the outcome of this experiment reminds me of the saying "taking candy from a baby".