It is demonstrated that non local Cooper pairs can propagate in ferromagnetic
electrodes having an opposite spin orientation. In the presence of such crossed
correlations, the superconducting gap is found to depend explicitly on the
relative orientation of the ferromagnetic electrodes. Non local Cooper pairs
can in principle be probed with dc-transport. With two ferromagnetic
electrodes, we propose a ``quantum switch'' that can be used to detect
correlated pairs of electrons. With three or more ferromagnetic electrodes, the
Cooper pair-like state is a linear superposition of Cooper pairs which could be
detected in dc-transport. The effect also induces an enhancement of the
ferromagnetic proximity effect on the basis of crossed superconducting
correlations propagating along domain walls.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe