According to a popular definition
a system is called "entangled" if its quantum state cannot be factored as a product of states of its individual distinct ("local") constituents (e.g. individual particles).
The corresponding quantum state of an entangled system of two constituents would be expressed in general as
$$|\psi\rangle := \sum_{j = 1}^{N_A}~\sum_{k = 1}^{N_B}~c_{(j, k)}~|\phi_j^A\rangle \otimes |\phi_k^B\rangle,$$
where
(1):
$|\phi_j^A\rangle$ denotes any one of the $N_A \ge 2$ pairwise ortho-normal eigenstates of operator $\hat A$ applied to identify one constituent (e.g. by "detector $A$"),
(2):
$|\phi_j^B\rangle$ denotes any one of the $N_B \ge 2$ pairwise ortho-normal eigenstates of operator $\hat B$ applied to identify the other constituent (e.g. by "detector $B$", which is explicitly distinct from "detector $A$", for instance by detectors $A$ and $B$ being explicitly prescribed as separated from each other),
(3):
state $|\psi\rangle$ is normalized, $\langle\psi|\psi\rangle = 1$; in particular there is at least one non-zero coefficient $c_{(j, k)}$, and
(4):
there are no $N_A + N_B$ numbers $r_q$ to be found such that all coefficients could be expressed as factors $c_{(j, k)} := r_j~r_{(N_A + k)}$.
(Consequently there are at least two non-zero coefficients in the expression of $|\psi\rangle$.)
Now, considering only any one (valid) trial separately, there is a definite identification of the one constituent provided (by detector $A$) as, say, $|\phi_j^A\rangle$, and a definite identification of the other constituent provided (by detector $B$) as, say, $|\phi_k^B\rangle$.
This one trial might be considered one instance of an ensemble of $N$ trials whose quantum state is an entangled state as described above, with $c_{(j, k)} \ne 0$.
But this one trial might also (or instead) be considered one instance of an ensemble of $N$ trials whose quantum state is the same in all instances (perhaps aside from an incidental phase factor); thereby failing the consequence of condition (4)
.
Or this one trial might also (or instead) be considered one instance of an ensemble of $N$ trials whose quantum state is "mixed" but not an entangled state either, for failing condition (4)
itself.
Therefore I wonder:
Is it appropriate to say, as apparently it is popular to do, that
a subatomic particle decays into an entangled pair of other particles
?
Is "having been entangled" a conclusive description of constituents in only any one (valid) trial?
Can the appropriateness (or lack thereof) of such a description referring to only one (valid) trial perhaps be quantified, e.g. in terms of numbers $N_A$, $N_B$ and $N$?