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arxiv: 1205.4926 · v2 · pith:3OKR4UOXnew · submitted 2012-05-22 · 🪐 quant-ph

A quantum delayed choice experiment

classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords quantumexperimentchoicedelayedparticlephotonwavebehaviour
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Quantum systems exhibit particle-like or wave-like behaviour depending on the experimental apparatus they are confronted by. This wave-particle duality is at the heart of quantum mechanics, and is fully captured in Wheeler's famous delayed choice gedanken experiment. In this variant of the double slit experiment, the observer chooses to test either the particle or wave nature of a photon after it has passed through the slits. Here we report on a quantum delayed choice experiment, based on a quantum controlled beam-splitter, in which both particle and wave behaviours can be investigated simultaneously. The genuinely quantum nature of the photon's behaviour is tested via a Bell inequality, which here replaces the delayed choice of the observer. We observe strong Bell inequality violations, thus showing that no model in which the photon knows in advance what type of experiment it will be confronted by, hence behaving either as a particle or as wave, can account for the experimental data.

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Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Delayed choice experiments and causality in quantum mechanics

    quant-ph 2019-07 unverdicted novelty 2.0

    Using Many Worlds, delayed choice experiments preserve causality, interference and correlations are complementary, and there is no objective reality in the EPR sense.