A classical Young's double-slit experiment achieves high phase sensitivity by exploiting anomalous wave-vector shifts from super-oscillations in intensity minima.
Anomalous Weak Values Are Proofs of Contextuality
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The average result of a weak measurement of some observable $A$ can, under post-selection of the measured quantum system, exceed the largest eigenvalue of $A$. The nature of weak measurements, as well as the presence of post-selection and hence possible contribution of measurement-disturbance, has led to a long-running debate about whether or not this is surprising. Here, it is shown that such "anomalous weak values" are non-classical in a precise sense: a sufficiently weak measurement of one constitutes a proof of contextuality. This clarifies, for example, which features must be present (and in an experiment, verified) to demonstrate an effect with no satisfying classical explanation.
fields
physics.optics 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Double-slit optical ventriloquism: High phase sensitivity via diffraction patterns
A classical Young's double-slit experiment achieves high phase sensitivity by exploiting anomalous wave-vector shifts from super-oscillations in intensity minima.