In non-relativistic quantum mechanics, two particles are said to be indistinguishable if the wavefunction for the system consisting of just those two particles satisfies $|\psi(x_{1}, x_{2}, t)|^{2} = |\psi(x_{2}, x_{1}, t)|^{2}$ for all time $t$. (And of course, any two fermions or two bosons of the same particle type are known to be indistinguishable.)
I'm a bit confused how this can be reconciled with the notion of the quantum Zeno effect, which is the fact that when the same measurement is done in quick succession repeatedly, the evolution of the system being measured tends to slow down, and the system essentially freezes in the limit of making more and more measurement in a given time span. This makes sense given how projective measurements work, and this has been experimentally observed.
However, this seems like it could be used as a way to distinguish particles, which shouldn't be possible.
Suppose I have two electrons, each in a separate ion trap, and now suppose I measure the positions of the two electrons at a time $t$. Now if I measure the positions of the two electrons at a time $t+\epsilon$, shouldn't it be the case that the electron measured in ion trap 1 at time $t$ is the same electron measured in ion trap at time $t+\epsilon$? Why is it invalid to conclude this?
If the two electrons are stored in ion traps such that they can't escape or travel across the laboratory, and if we continue to do repeated measurements such that their joint state doesn't evolve, shouldn't it be possible to say that the electron inside ion trap 1 continues to be inside ion trap 1?