Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement

There has been an intense debate on the question as to whether a quanton, passing through a double-slit, experiences a 'momentum kick' due to the act of which-way detection. There have been conflicting points of view on this issue over many decades. This issue is addressed here in the gene...

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Main Authors: Neha Pathania, Tabish Qureshi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften 2021-07-01
Series:Quantum
Online Access:https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2021-07-20-507/pdf/
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spelling doaj-63ada233b92546ce85933b6c26ea43852021-07-20T13:34:11ZengVerein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den QuantenwissenschaftenQuantum2521-327X2021-07-01550710.22331/q-2021-07-20-50710.22331/q-2021-07-20-507Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way MeasurementNeha PathaniaTabish QureshiThere has been an intense debate on the question as to whether a quanton, passing through a double-slit, experiences a 'momentum kick' due to the act of which-way detection. There have been conflicting points of view on this issue over many decades. This issue is addressed here in the general setting where the which-way detection may be imperfect. It is shown here that the loss of interference may still be interpreted as arising out of tiny momentum kicks which the quanton appears to receive, irrespective of the nature of the which-way detector. Interestingly, the magnitude of the random momentum kicks is always $\textit{h/2d, d}$ being the slit separation, irrespective of how perfect or imperfect the which-way detection is. This is contrary to what has been suggested in the earlier literature. The imperfection of which-way detection decides how frequent are the momentum kicks. It has been shown earlier that for perfect which-way detection, the quanton receives a momentum kick fifty percent of the time. Here it is shown that for imperfect which-way detection, the quanton receives momentum kicks of the same magnitude, but less often. A precise relation between the frequency of kicks and the visibility of interference is found here.https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2021-07-20-507/pdf/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neha Pathania
Tabish Qureshi
spellingShingle Neha Pathania
Tabish Qureshi
Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement
Quantum
author_facet Neha Pathania
Tabish Qureshi
author_sort Neha Pathania
title Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement
title_short Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement
title_full Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement
title_fullStr Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement
title_full_unstemmed Momentum Kicks in Imperfect Which-Way Measurement
title_sort momentum kicks in imperfect which-way measurement
publisher Verein zur Förderung des Open Access Publizierens in den Quantenwissenschaften
series Quantum
issn 2521-327X
publishDate 2021-07-01
description There has been an intense debate on the question as to whether a quanton, passing through a double-slit, experiences a 'momentum kick' due to the act of which-way detection. There have been conflicting points of view on this issue over many decades. This issue is addressed here in the general setting where the which-way detection may be imperfect. It is shown here that the loss of interference may still be interpreted as arising out of tiny momentum kicks which the quanton appears to receive, irrespective of the nature of the which-way detector. Interestingly, the magnitude of the random momentum kicks is always $\textit{h/2d, d}$ being the slit separation, irrespective of how perfect or imperfect the which-way detection is. This is contrary to what has been suggested in the earlier literature. The imperfection of which-way detection decides how frequent are the momentum kicks. It has been shown earlier that for perfect which-way detection, the quanton receives a momentum kick fifty percent of the time. Here it is shown that for imperfect which-way detection, the quanton receives momentum kicks of the same magnitude, but less often. A precise relation between the frequency of kicks and the visibility of interference is found here.
url https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2021-07-20-507/pdf/
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