Wheeler's Delayed Choice Experiment
Wheeler's Delayed Choice Experiment
Wheeler's Delayed Choice Experiment
Contents
[hide] 1 Introdu ction 2 Workin g out implem entatio n of the experi ment 2 . 1 W h e e l e r ' s a s t r o n o m i c a l e x p e r i m e n t
[edit] Introduction
Wheeler's experiment consisted of a standard double-slit experiment, except that the detector screen could be removed at the last moment, thereby directing light into two more remote telescopes, each one focused on one of the slits. This allowed a "delayed choice" of the observer, i.e. a choice made after the presumed photon would have cleared the midstream barrier containing two parallel slits. The two telescopes, behind the (removed) screen could presumably "see" a flash of light from one of the slits, and would detect by which path the photon traveled. According to the results of the double slit experiment, if experimenters do something to learn which slit the photon goes through, they change the outcome of the experiment and the behavior of the photon. If the experimenters know which slit it goes through, the photon will behave as a particle. If they do not know which slit it goes through, the photon will behave as if it were a wave when it is given an opportunity to interfere with itself. The double-slit experiment is meant to observe phenomena that indicate whether light has a particle nature or a wave nature. The fundamental lesson of Wheeler's delayed choice experiment is that the result depends on whether the experiment is set up to detect waves or particles.
is reported to have come up with a more elaborate thought experiment.[4] Wheeler suggests that one may imagine a more extraordinary scenario wherein the scale of the experiment is magnified to astronomical dimensions: a photon has originated from a star or even a distant galaxy, and its path is bent by an intervening galaxy, black hole, or other massive object, so that it could arrive at a detector on earth by either of two different paths.
Einstein Cross, an example of gravitational lensing The thought experiment assumes that the emitter of the photon is so positioned that the two paths are equal. If experimenters observe the single photon with a detector screen, e.g., a photographic plate or other imaging device (as in the original experiment), they should see it as part of an interference pattern (to be filled out by additional incoming photons), but if they instead use two telescopes focused to either side of the black hole they may expect to observe the photon only in one of them. Some interpretations of Wheeler's thought experiment are premised on the belief that interference will indeed occur between the two images, and the crux of the experiment lies in determining whether identifying photons as coming from one referred image or the other will make a difference in experimental outcomes. Experimenters are already gathering light from one referred image (one pathway) by means of one telescope, and they can add light that has come by the other pathway by means of the other telescope. If experimenters keep the two telescope images separate physically, then they ought not to expect any kind of interference fringes or other "spooky" behavior. And it is known that some photons must have reached earth via each pathway. On the other hand, if experimenters project the images from the two telescopes onto the same spot on a detection screen and they move the images with respect to each other to change their phase relationship so that they can get cancellation in some areas and reinforcement in another area, they will then get an interference pattern, and will have demonstrated that this experiment is another version of the double-slit experiment. There appears to be a problem, however. It may be claimed that one knows which photons have come by path A and which photons have come by path B, and that one has that knowledge because
the photons have been physically fenced in by the tubes out of which the telescopes are constructed. However, once experimenters merge the two images on the detection screen, one can no longer know that a photon that lights up a certain spot on the detection screen has come through telescope A or through telescope B. So they have abandoned that information by mixing the two streams. There is one more possibility, as indicated in a diagram above. If interference is actually thwarted, then photons should be found only at the position of the two primary maxima. Suppose that experimenters project the images onto two separate detection screens. That should give them a situation analogous to the one where they were viewing a distant light source with only one slit open. In the physics laboratory there are some diffraction effects due to light's having been put through a narrow opening, but not the broad band that is known as the interference fringe. If interference between the images brought in via two telescopes does appear, experimenters ought to see dimmer images at the secondary, tertiary, etc. maxima predicted for interference effects. They should not expect to see the same range and clarity of secondary images (if any at all) with one telescope capped off. What occurs in this case is again a matter for empirical study to determine. The idea behind some interpretations of the Wheeler experiment is that it might be possible to determine which side of a double-slit experiment a photon traveled through without destroying the interference pattern that occurs when the two versions of its probability wave interact on the detector screen of the typical double-slit experiment. Another view is that whether interference fringes are noted or not depends not on anything that happened between the distant star and earth. Instead, it depends entirely on what form the observation or the measurement of the photon or photons takes. Looking for a photon on one path or the other will produce the observation of one photon at a single point by a telescope aimed in a certain direction. Looking for an interference pattern by merging the beams coming through both paths will produce interference fringes.
[edit] Bibliography
Vincent Jacques et al., Experimental Realization of Wheeler's Delayed-Choice Gedanken Experiment, Science Vol. 315. no. 5814, pp. 966 - 968 (2007). Preprint available at http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0610241v1
John Archibald Wheeler, "The 'Past' and the 'Delayed-Choice Double-Slit Experiment'," pp 948, in A.R. Marlow, editor, Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theory, Academic Press (1978) John Archibald Wheeler and Wojciech Hubert Zurek , Quantum Theory and Measurement (Princeton Series in Physics) John D. Barrow, Paul C. W. Davies, and Jr, Charles L. Harperm Science and Ultimate Reality: Quantum Theory, Cosmology, and Complexity (Cambridge University Press) 2004
[edit] References
1. ^ Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theory, edited by A.R. Marlow, Academic Press, 1978 2. ^ a b Cho, Adrian. After a Short Delay, Quantum Mechanics Becomes Even Weirder. ScienceNOW Daily News. 16 February 2007 3. ^ John Archibald Wheeler, "The 'Past' and the 'Delayed-Choice' Double-Slit Experiment", in Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Theory, edited by A.R. Marlow, p. 13 4. ^ Source for this experiment in Wheeler's own writing has not been traced yet. Dr. John Cramer indicates that Wheeler offered the idea in response to criticism of a proposed experiment on a smaller scale. (Personal communication.) 5. ^ V. Jacques et al., Science 315, 966 (2007). 6. ^ A thorough discussion by Jacques et al. in pdf form is available at http://fr.arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0610241. 7. ^ Quantum Astronomy (IV): Cosmic-Scale Double-Slit Experiment