Von Neumann Measurements - The Quantum Eraser: (AKA: No More Dull Than The Last Lecture?)
Von Neumann Measurements - The Quantum Eraser: (AKA: No More Dull Than The Last Lecture?)
Von Neumann Measurements - The Quantum Eraser: (AKA: No More Dull Than The Last Lecture?)
Slides, and some other useful links, are still being posted at:
http://www.physics.utoronto.ca/~steinberg/QMP.html
21 Oct 2003
Recap: decoherence arises from
throwing away information
Taking the trace over the environment retains only terms diagonal
in the environment variables – i.e., no cross-terms (coherences) remain
if they refer to different states of the environment.
(If there is any way – even in principle – to tell which of two
paths was followed, then no interference may occur.)
s when env is
s when env is
So, how does a system become
"entangled" with a measuring device?
• First, recall: Bohr – we must treat measurement classically
Wigner – why must we?
• von Neumann:there are two processes in QM: Unitary and Reduction.
He shows how all the effects of measurement we've described so far
may be explained without any reduction, or macroscopic devices.
A Hint=gApx A
Initial State of Pointer
System-pointer
coupling
x x
A von Neumann measurement
Initial State of System Final state of both (entangled)
A Hint=gApx A
Initial State of Pointer
System-pointer
coupling
x x
Entangled (nonseparable) states
Consider the state resulting from this interaction with a pointer P:
+ + +
A Hint=gApx
“OR” “OR” “OR”
Initial State of Pointer
System-pointer
coupling
A
Unless the pointer is somehow included
in the interferometer, interference will
never again be observed between these
different peaks; we may as well suppose
a collapse has really occurred, and one peak
x or another has been selected at random.
Back-Action
In other words, the measurement does not simply cause the
pointer position to evolve, while leaving the system alone.
The interaction entangles the two, and as we have seen, this
entanglement is the source of decoherence.
It is often also described as "back-action" of the measuring
device on the measured system. Unless Px, the momentum
of the pointer, is perfectly well-defined, then the interaction
Hamiltonian Hint = g A Px looks like an uncertain (noisy)
potential for the particle.
A high-resolution measurement needs a well-defined pointer position X.
This implies (by Heisenberg) that Px is not well-defined.
The more accurate the measurement, the greater the back-action.
Measuring A perturbs the variable conjugate to A "randomly"
(unless, that is, you pay attention to entanglement).
(For future thought: note that my entanglement argument
needed to assume that the pointer states were orthogonal.)
Summary so far...
We have no idea whether or not "collapse" really occurs.
The von Neumann interaction shows how the two systems become
entangled, and how this may look like random noise from the point
of view of the subsystem.
Probabilities:
Interference terms
New probabilities:
NO INTERFERENCE!
But what if we select (project) out, not A, and not B, but an equal superposition?
INTERFERENCE RETURNS!
A microscopic measurement
i2 SOURCE M1
det. 1
s1
BS
s2
i1 det. 2
M2
The "i" photons provide which-path information, and destroy the interference.
Can this information be "erased"?
s1
BS
s2
i1- i2
i1
M2
(i1+i2)
- (i1- i2) In fact, this should have been obvious.
= i2 If combining the i photons at a beam-splitter could restore fringes
on the right, nothing would prevent me from combining them a year
after you looked at your detectors. Could I change whether or not you
had seen fringes ?!
Measurement is not unitary – in other words, if I only keep some events and
throw out others, perhaps I can restore your interference.
i2 SOURCE M1
det. 1
s1
BS
s2
i1 det. 2
M2
"i1+i2"
"i1- i2"
Together
Don't overlook the symmetry...
Detectors 1 and 2 are equally likely to fire, regardless of the phase setting.
When the "i1-i2" detector fires, this may tell me that detector 1 will fire
instead of detector 2.
Of course, have the time, the "i1+i2" detector fires, telling me that detector 2
will fire instead of detector 1.
...or is it that half the time, detector 1 fires, collapsing the "i" photon
into "i1-i2"...
...and that half the time, detector 2 fires, collapsing the "i"
into "i1+i2"...?
Half-wave plate
H
H
V
H
tt H
V
distinguishable;
no interference.
rr V
H
Interference going away...
And coming back again!
How complicated you have to make
it sound if you want to get it published
M2
Here I'm left with a photon 900 away from whatever
I detected. Now I just have linear optics to think about.
M2
In coincidence, only see |HV> - |VH> .... that famous EPR-entangled state.
Of course we see nonlocal correlations between the polarisations.
r t
+
r t
Bell-inequality tests;
dispersion cancellation;
newer QEs (atom interferometry;
delayed choice).