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{{Quantum mechanics|cTopic=Formulations}}
{{sprotected}}
The '''Afshar experiment''' is a variation of the ] in quantum mechanics, devised and carried out by Shahriar Afshar in 2004.<ref name="Chown2004"/><ref name="Afshar2004">
{{POV}}
{{cite journal
In ], and more specifically, ], the '''Afshar experiment''' is an ] ], devised by ] in ], that its proponents claim disproves ]'s ]. Since this principle is a central idea of quantum mechanics, the proper interpretation of the experiment has engendered some controversy in the physics community; response papers have been critical of Afshar's interpretation. The controversy has appeared online in ]s, at physics colloquia and ]s, and in ] e-print archives. Papers by Afshar on the experiment have been published in the ] and ] conference proceedings; however, as of ], ], neither a description of the experiment, nor any discussion of its theoretical interpretation, has been published in a refereed physics journal.
| author = S. S. Afshar
| year = 2004
| title = Waving Copenhagen Good-bye: Were the founders of Quantum Mechanics wrong?
| url = http://calexport.fas.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/calendar/exporter.cgi?view=event_detail&id=10416384
| journal = Harvard Seminar Announcement
| access-date = 2013-12-01
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120305233130/http://calexport.fas.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/calendar/exporter.cgi?view=event_detail&id=10416384
| archive-date = 2012-03-05
}}</ref> In the experiment, light generated by a ] passes through two closely spaced pinholes, and is refocused by a ] so that the image of each pinhole falls on a separate ]. In addition, a grid of thin wires is placed just before the lens on the dark fringes of an ].<ref name="Afshar2007" />


Afshar claimed that the experiment gives information about which path a ] takes through the apparatus, while simultaneously allowing interference between the paths to be observed.<ref name="Afshar2005">
==Overview==
{{cite journal |author=S. S. Afshar |year=2005 |editor1-last=Roychoudhuri |editor1-first=Chandrasekhar |editor2-last=Creath |editor2-first=Katherine |title=Violation of the principle of complementarity, and its implications |journal=] |series=The Nature of Light: What Is a Photon? |volume=5866 |pages=229–244 |arxiv=quant-ph/0701027 |bibcode=2005SPIE.5866..229A |doi=10.1117/12.638774 |s2cid=119375418}}</ref><ref name="Afshar2006">
The principle of complementarity states that two complementary ] cannot both be measured for any given quantum particle. For example, a particle's ] and ] cannot be observed at the same time: this is ]'s ].
{{cite journal |author=S. S. Afshar |year=2006 |title=Violation of Bohr's complementarity: One slit or both? |journal=] |volume=810 |pages=294–299 |arxiv=quant-ph/0701039 |bibcode=2006AIPC..810..294A |doi=10.1063/1.2158731 |s2cid=117905639}}</ref> According to Afshar, this violates the ] of ].<ref name="Afshar2007">
{{cite journal
|author1=S. S. Afshar |author2=E. Flores |author3=K. F. McDonald |author4=E. Knoesel |year=2007
|title=Paradox in wave-particle duality
|journal=]
|volume=37 |issue=2 |pages=295–305
|arxiv=quant-ph/0702188
|bibcode=2007FoPh...37..295A
|doi=10.1007/s10701-006-9102-8
|s2cid=2161197 }}</ref><ref name="Zheng2011">
{{cite journal |author1=J. Zheng |author2=C. Zheng |year=2011 |title=Variant simulation system using quaternion structures |journal=] |volume=59 |issue=5 |pages=484 |bibcode=2012JMOp...59..484Z |doi=10.1080/09500340.2011.636152 |s2cid=121934786}}</ref>


The experiment has been analyzed and repeated by a number of investigators.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Georgiev |first=Danko |date=2012-01-26 |title=Quantum Histories and Quantum Complementarity |journal=ISRN Mathematical Physics |language=en |volume=2012 |pages=1–37 |doi=10.5402/2012/327278 |issn=2090-4681|doi-access=free }}</ref> There are several theories that explain the effect without violating complementarity.<ref name="Kastner2005" /><ref name="Steuernagel2007" /><ref name="EGdualityOK">
One of Afshar's assertions is that, in his experiment, one can check for ]s of a ] stream (a momentum measurement) while at the same time observing the photon's path (a position measurement). Afshar's experiment attempts to do this using a variant of the classic ] ]. Such ] experiments typically have two "arms" or paths a photon may take. Afshar attempts to both preserve ], and to determine "which way" or "Welcher Weg" the photon went. Many of the claims associated with this experiment cut across several conventional ideas in quantum mechanics.
{{cite journal
|author=V. Jacques
|year=2008
|title=Illustration of quantum complementarity using single photons interfering on a grating
|journal=]
|volume=10 |issue=12 |page=123009
|arxiv=0807.5079
|bibcode=2008NJPh...10l3009J
|doi=10.1088/1367-2630/10/12/123009
|s2cid=2627030
|display-authors=etal}}</ref><ref name="Georgiev2012">
{{cite journal
| author = D. D. Georgiev
| year = 2012
| title = Quantum histories and quantum complementarity
| journal = ISRN Mathematical Physics
| volume = 2012
| page = 327278
| doi = 10.5402/2012/327278
| doi-access = free
}}
</ref> ] claims the experiment provides evidence for the ] of quantum mechanics over other interpretations.


==History== == History ==
Shahriar S. Afshar's experimental work was done initially at the ] (IRIMS) in 2001 and later reproduced at ] in 2003, while he was a Research Scholar there. He presented his results in a seminar talk in March 2004 entitled ''Waving Copenhagen Good-bye: Were the founders of Quantum Mechanics wrong?'' . The experiment was subsequently featured as the cover story in the July 24, 2004 edition of '']''. Shahriar Afshar's experimental work was done initially at the Institute for Radiation-Induced Mass Studies (IRIMS)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Institute for Radiation-Induced Mass Studies (IRIMS) |url=https://irims.org/index.html |access-date=2023-09-21 |website=irims.org}}</ref> in Boston and later reproduced at ], while he was there as a ].<ref name="Chown2004">{{cite journal
| last = Chown
| year = 2004
, and published in ''Proc. SPIE'' '''5866''', 229-244 in July of 2005 .
| title = Quantum Rebel
Afshar's claim that his experiment invalidates the complementarity principle would have far-reaching implications for the understanding of quantum mechanics, potentially challenging the ] and according to ], the ]. Cramer also asserts that Afshar's results support his ] of quantum mechanics.
| url = https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18324575-300-quantum-rebel/
| journal = ]
| volume = 183 | issue = 2457 | pages = 30–35
|first = Marcus}}{{Subscription required}}</ref> The results were first presented at a seminar at Harvard in March 2004.<ref name="Afshar2004"/> The experiment was featured as the cover story in the July 24, 2004 edition of the popular science magazine '']'' endorsed by professor John G. Cramer of the ].<ref name="Chown2004"/><ref name="bombshell">{{Dead link|date=April 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}<!--attempted fix for this dead link failed 30 Nov 2013--> Science Friday</ref> The ''New Scientist'' feature article generated many responses, including various letters to the editor that appeared in the August 7 and August 14, 2004, issues, arguing against the conclusions being drawn by Afshar.<ref name="Cramer2004">
{{cite journal
| author = J. G. Cramer
| year = 2004
| title = Bohr is still wrong
| url = https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18324614.100.html
| journal = ]
| volume = 183 | issue = 2461 | page = 26
}}</ref> The results were published in a ] conference proceedings in 2005.<ref name="Afshar2005" /> A follow-up paper was published in a scientific journal ] in January 2007<ref name="Afshar2007"/> and featured in ''New Scientist'' in February 2007.<ref name="Chown2007">{{cite journal
| last = Chown
| year = 2007
| title = Quantum rebel wins over doubters
| url = https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19325915-400-quantum-rebel-wins-over-doubters/
| journal = ]
| volume = 197 | issue = 2591 | page = 13
|first = Marcus}}{{Subscription required}}</ref>


== Experimental setup ==
As of late May, 2005, Afshar has presented his work at various university seminars and in late March of 2005, at the ] meeting in Los Angeles . His paper has been published by the ] in July, 2005 . Afshar's results have also been reported in the ] as cited above and in other popular science magazines. The ''New Scientist'' feature article itself generated many responses, including various letters to the editor that appeared in the August 7 and August 14, 2004 issues. Among those writing were Alistair Rae (Centre for Photonic Systems, ]), David Dunstan (Head of the Physics Department, ]) and Alwyn Eades (Director of the Microscopy Center, Materials Science Department, ]) who viewed Afshar's interpretation with skepticism. Afshar's response to their critiques was given in a response letter from Cramer published on August 21, 2004.
]
]
]


The experiment uses a setup similar to that for the ]. In Afshar's variant, light generated by a ] passes through two closely spaced ''circular'' pinholes (not slits). After the dual pinholes, a ] refocuses the light so that the image of each pinhole falls on separate photon-detectors (Fig. 1). With pinhole 2 closed, a photon that goes through pinhole 1 impinges only on photon detector 1. Similarly, with pinhole 1 closed, a photon that goes through pinhole 2 impinges only on photon detector 2. With both pinholes open, Afshar claims, citing Wheeler<ref name="Wheeler">
==Experimental setup and Afshar's interpretation ==
{{cite book
| last = Wheeler
| first = John
| date = 1978
| title = Mathematical foundations of quantum theory
| pages = 9–48
| publisher = Elsevier
}}</ref> in support, that pinhole 1 remains correlated to photon Detector 1 (and vice versa for pinhole 2 to photon Detector 2), and therefore that which-way information is preserved when both pinholes are open.<ref name="Afshar2007"/>


When the light acts as a wave, because of ] one can observe that there are regions that the photons avoid, called ''dark fringes''. A grid of thin wires is placed just before the lens (Fig. 2) so that the wires lie in the dark fringes of an interference pattern which is produced by the dual pinhole setup. If one of the pinholes is blocked, the interference pattern will no longer be formed, and the grid of wires causes appreciable ] in the light and blocks some of it from detection by the corresponding photon detector. However, when both pinholes are open, the effect of the wires is negligible, comparable to the case in which there are no wires placed in front of the lens (Fig. 3), because the wires lie in the dark fringes of an interference pattern. The effect is not dependent on the light intensity (photon flux).
The experiment uses a setup similar to that for the ]. In Afshar's variant, light generated by a ] passes through two closely spaced ''circular'' pinholes (not slits). After the dual pinholes, a lens refocuses the light so that the image of each pinhole is received by a separate photo-detector (Fig. 1). In this setup, a photon that goes through pinhole number one impinges only on detector number one, and similarly, if it goes through pinhole two. Therefore, if observed at the image plane, the setup is such that the light behaves as a stream of particles and can be assigned to a particular pinhole. ]


== Afshar's interpretation ==
When the light acts as a wave, because of interference one can observe that there are regions that the photons avoid, called ''dark fringes''. Afshar now places a grid of thin wires just before the lens (Fig. 2). These wires are placed in previously measured positions of the dark fringes of an interference pattern which is produced by the dual pinhole setup when observed directly. If one of the pinholes is blocked, the interference pattern can no longer be formed, and some of the light will be blocked by the wires. Consequently, one would expect that the image quality is reduced, as is indeed observed by Afshar. Afshar then claims that he can check for the wave characteristics of the light in the same experiment, by the presence of the grid. ]
Afshar's conclusion is that, when both pinholes are open, the light exhibits wave-like behavior when going past the wires, since the light goes through the spaces between the wires but avoids the wires themselves, but also exhibits particle-like behavior after going through the lens, with photons going to a correlated photo-detector. Afshar argues that this behavior contradicts the ] to the extent that it shows both wave and particle characteristics in the same experiment for the same photons.


Afshar asserts that there is simultaneously high visibility ''V'' of interference as well as high distinguishability ''D'' (corresponding to which-path information), so that ''V''<sup>2</sup> + ''D''<sup>2</sup> > 1, and the ] is violated.<ref name="Afshar2007" />
At this point, Afshar compares the results of what is seen at the photo-detectors when one pinhole is closed with what is seen at the photo-detectors when both pinholes are open. When one pinhole is closed, the grid of wires causes some ] in the light, and blocks a certain amount of light received by the corresponding photo-detector. When both pinholes were open, however, the effect of the wires is minimized, so that the results are comparable to the case in which there are no wires placed in front of the lens (Fig.3).]


== Reception ==
Afshar's conclusion is that the light exhibits a wave-like behavior when going through the wires, since the light goes through the spaces between the wires when both slits were open, but also exhibits a particle-like behavior after going through the lens, with photons going to a given photo-detector.
=== Specific criticism===
A number of scientists have published criticisms of Afshar's interpretation of his results, some of which reject the claims of a violation of complementarity, while differing in the way they explain how complementarity copes with the experiment. For example, one paper contests Afshar's core claim, that the ] is violated. The researchers re-ran the experiment, using a different method for measuring the visibility of the interference pattern than that used by Afshar, and found no violation of complementarity, concluding "This result demonstrates that the experiment can be perfectly explained by the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics."<ref name="EGdualityOK"/>


Below is a synopsis of papers by several critics highlighting their main arguments and the disagreements they have amongst themselves:
This behavior, Afshar argues, contradicts the principle of complementarity, since it shows both complementary wave and particle characteristics in the same experiment for the same photons; although not at the same time, some critics point out. Afshar asserts this experiment has also been conducted with single photons and the results are identical to the high flux experiment, although these results were not available at the time of the talk at Harvard.


* Ruth Kastner, Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science, ].<ref name="Kastner2005">
==Theory==
{{cite journal
| author = R. Kastner
| title = Why the Afshar experiment does not refute complementarity?
| journal = ]
| volume = 36 | pages = 649–658 | year = 2005
| doi = 10.1016/j.shpsb.2005.04.006
| issue = 4
| bibcode = 2005SHPMP..36..649K
|arxiv = quant-ph/0502021 | s2cid = 119438183
}}</ref><ref name="Kastner2006">
{{cite journal
| author = R. E. Kastner
| year = 2006
| title = The Afshar Experiment and Complementarity
| url = http://meetings.aps.org/Meeting/MAR06/Event/40525
| journal = APS Meeting, March 13–17, Baltimore, Maryland
| pages =40011
| bibcode = 2006APS..MARD40011K
}}</ref>
*:Kastner's criticism, published in a peer-reviewed paper, proceeds by setting up a ] and applying Afshar's logic to it to expose its flaw. She proposes that Afshar's experiment is equivalent to preparing an electron in a spin-up state and then measuring its sideways spin. This does not imply that one has found out the up-down spin state and the sideways spin state of any electron simultaneously. Applied to Afshar's experiment: "Nevertheless, even with the grid removed, since the photon is prepared in a superposition ''S'', the measurement at the final screen at ''t''<sub>2</sub> ''never really is'' a 'which-way' measurement (the term traditionally attached to the slit-basis observable <math>\mathcal O</math>), because it cannot tell us 'which slit the photon actually went through.'
* Daniel Reitzner, Research Center for Quantum Information, Institute of Physics, ], ], ].<ref name="Reitzner">
{{cite arXiv
| author = D. Reitzner
| title = Comment on Afshar's experiments.
| year = 2007
|eprint = quant-ph/0701152 }}</ref>
*:Reitzner performed numerical simulations, published in a preprint, of Afshar's arrangement and obtained the same results that Afshar obtained experimentally. From this he argues that the photons exhibit wave behavior, including high fringe visibility but no which-way information, up to the point they hit the detector: "In other words the two-peaked distribution is an interference pattern and the photon behaves as a wave and exhibits no particle properties until it hits the plate. As a result a which-way information can never be obtained in this way."
* ], Professor of Physics at ]<ref name="Unruh2004">
{{cite web
| author = W. Unruh
| year = 2004
| title = Shahriar Afshar – Quantum Rebel?
| url = http://www.theory.physics.ubc.ca/rebel.html
}}</ref>
*:Unruh, like Kastner, proceeds by setting up an arrangement that he feels is equivalent but simpler. The size of the effect is larger so that it is easier to see the flaw in the logic. In Unruh's view that flaw is, in the case that an obstacle exists at the position of the dark fringes, "drawing the inference that IF the particle was detected in detector 1, THEN it must have come from path 1. Similarly, IF it were detected in detector 2, then it came from path 2." In other words, he accepts the existence of an interference pattern but rejects the existence of which-way information.
* ], Former assistant professor of physics, ].<ref name="Motl2004">
{{cite web
| author = L. Motl
| year = 2004
| title = Violation of complementarity?
| url = http://motls.blogspot.com/2004/11/violation-of-complementarity.html
}}</ref>
*:Motl's criticism, published in his blog, is based on an analysis of Afshar's actual setup, instead of proposing a different experiment like Unruh and Kastner. In contrast to Unruh and Kastner, he believes that which-way information always exists, but argues that the measured contrast of the interference pattern is actually very low: "Because this signal (disruption) from the second, middle picture is small (equivalently, it only affects a very small portion of the photons), the contrast V is also very small, and goes to zero for infinitely thin wires." He also argues that the experiment can be understood with classical electrodynamics and has "nothing to do with quantum mechanics".
* Ole Steuernagel, School of Physics, Astronomy and Mathematics, ], UK.<ref name="Steuernagel2007">
{{cite journal
| author = O. Steuernagel
| year = 2007
| title = Afshar's experiment does not show a violation of complementarity
| journal = ]
| volume = 37 | page = 1370
| doi = 10.1007/s10701-007-9153-5
| arxiv =quant-ph/0512123
|bibcode = 2007FoPh...37.1370S
| issue = 9
| s2cid = 53056142
}}</ref>
*:Steuernagel makes a quantitative analysis of the various transmitted, refracted, and reflected modes in a setup that differs only slightly from Afshar's. He concludes that the Englert-Greenberger duality relation is strictly satisfied, and in particular that the fringe visibility for thin wires is small. Like some of the other critics, he emphasizes that inferring an interference pattern is not the same as measuring one: "Finally, the greatest weakness in the analysis given by Afshar is the ''inference'' that an interference pattern must be present."
* Andrew Knight, Department of Physics, New York University<ref name="Knight2020">
{{cite journal
| author = Andrew Knight
| title = No Paradox in Wave-Particle Duality
|journal=]
| year = 2020
|volume=50 |issue=11 |pages=1723–1727
|arxiv=2006.05315
|doi=10.1007/s10701-020-00379-9
| bibcode = 2020FoPh...50.1723K
| s2cid = 219559143
}}</ref>
*:Argues that Afshar's claim to violate complementarity is a simple logical inconsistency: by setting up the experiment so that photons are spatially coherent over the two pinholes, the pinholes are necessarily indistinguishable by those photons. “In other words, Afshar et al. claim in one breath to have set up the experiment so that pinholes A and B are inherently indistinguishable by certain photons , and in another breath to have distinguished pinholes A and B with those same photons.”


=== Specific support ===
In the context of the archetypal ], Bohr's principle of ] can be mathematically represented through a relation expressing a limitation on fringe visibility V and path distinguishability D as follows,
* Afshar's coauthors Eduardo Flores and Ernst Knoesel criticize Kastner's setup and propose an alternative experimental setup.<ref name="Flores2007">
:<math>D^{2}+ V^{2}\le 1 \, </math>
{{cite book
| author = E. Flores and E. Knoesel
| editor-first1 = Chandrasekhar
| editor-first2 = Al F
| editor-first3 = Katherine
| editor-last1 = Roychoudhuri
| editor-last2 = Kracklauer
| editor-last3 = Creath
| title = The Nature of Light: What Are Photons?
| chapter = Why Kastner analysis does not apply to a modified Afshar experiment
| year = 2007
| volume = 6664
| pages = 66640O
| doi = 10.1117/12.730965
|arxiv = quant-ph/0702210 | s2cid = 119028739
}}</ref> By removing the lens of Afshar and causing two beams to overlap at a small angle, Flores et al. aimed to show that conservation of momentum guarantee the preservation of which-path information when both pinholes are open. But this experiment is still subject to Motl's objection that the 2 beams have a sub-microscopic diffraction pattern created by the convergence of the beams before the slits; the result would have been the measuring of which slit was open before the wires were ever reached.


*] adopts Afshar's interpretation of the experiment to support his own ] of quantum mechanics over the ] and the ].<ref name="Cramer2005">{{cite journal
This complementarity relation was first derived by D. Greenberger and A. Yasin (see Greenberger and Yasin, Phys. Lett. A 128, 391 (1988)), rediscovered by Jaeger, ], and Vaidman (see G. Jaeger, ], and L. Vaidman, Phys. Rev. A, Vol. 51, 54 (1995)), and over one year afterwards also by Englert (see B. Englert, Phys. Rev. Lett., Vol. 77, 2154 (1996)).
|author = J. G. Cramer
|year = 2005
|title = A farewell to Copenhagen?
|url = http://www.analogsf.com/0410/altview2.shtml
|journal = ]
|access-date = 2004-12-21
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20041208214837/http://www.analogsf.com/0410/altview2.shtml
|archive-date = 2004-12-08
|url-status = dead
}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Cramer, JG |title=The Quantum Handshake: Entanglement, Nonlocality and Transactions |publisher=Springer Verlag |year=2015 |isbn=978-3-319-24642-0 | pages=111–112 | url=https://archive.org/details/quantumhandshake0000cram/page/111 }}</ref>


== See also ==
Afshar claims that his experiment violates this limitation (and hence the principle of complementarity), however it is unclear how generic this relation is and whether it extends to cover more complicated experimental setups such as Afshar's.
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


==Critiques == == References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}


{{Quantum mechanics topics}}
Though Afshar's work is still the subject of ongoing interpretation and discussion, a significant portion of the scientific community is of the opinion that Afshar's experiment does not refute complementarity. There are a number of reasons why this experiment is not seen as undermining Complementarity or is widely viewed as irrelevant. Some common, popular views are:

The following is a partial list of critiques of Afshar's work. Afshar's rebuttals are available on his Q&A archive and FAQ .

*], Professor of Physics at ], .

*], Assistant Professor of Physics, ]

* Ruth Kastner, Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science, ], ,

* Aurelien Drezet, University of Graz Institut of experimental physics, Austria,

* Ole Steuernagel, School of Physics, Astronomy and Mathematics, University of Hertfordshire,

==References==

* Shahriar S. Afshar, "", (2003) ''IRIMS'' www.irims.org/quant-ph/030503/; , ; (Crossed beam experiment).

* John G. Cramer, "" (2005), ''Analog Science Fiction and Fact''. ''(A non-technical discussion in a popular forum)''

* Marcus Chown, "", "" (July 24, 2004) ''New Scientist magazine''; "", (October 6, 2004) ''The Independent''.
* Ira Flatow, "", , (July 30, 2004) ''Science Friday radio prgram, NPR.''
* Bethold-Georg Englert, Marlan O Scully & Herbert Walther, ''Quantum Optical Tests of Complementarity'' , Nature, Vol 351, pp 111-116 (9 May 1991). Demonstrates that quantum interference effects are destroyed by irreversible object-apparatus correlations ("measurement"), not by Heisenberg's uncertainty principle itself. See also ''The Duality in Matter and Light'' Scientific American, (December 1994)


{{DEFAULTSORT:Afshar Experiment}}
] ]
] ]
]

]
]

Latest revision as of 17:53, 21 November 2024

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The Afshar experiment is a variation of the double-slit experiment in quantum mechanics, devised and carried out by Shahriar Afshar in 2004. In the experiment, light generated by a laser passes through two closely spaced pinholes, and is refocused by a lens so that the image of each pinhole falls on a separate single-photon detector. In addition, a grid of thin wires is placed just before the lens on the dark fringes of an interference pattern.

Afshar claimed that the experiment gives information about which path a photon takes through the apparatus, while simultaneously allowing interference between the paths to be observed. According to Afshar, this violates the complementarity principle of quantum mechanics.

The experiment has been analyzed and repeated by a number of investigators. There are several theories that explain the effect without violating complementarity. John G. Cramer claims the experiment provides evidence for the transactional interpretation of quantum mechanics over other interpretations.

History

Shahriar Afshar's experimental work was done initially at the Institute for Radiation-Induced Mass Studies (IRIMS) in Boston and later reproduced at Harvard University, while he was there as a visiting researcher. The results were first presented at a seminar at Harvard in March 2004. The experiment was featured as the cover story in the July 24, 2004 edition of the popular science magazine New Scientist endorsed by professor John G. Cramer of the University of Washington. The New Scientist feature article generated many responses, including various letters to the editor that appeared in the August 7 and August 14, 2004, issues, arguing against the conclusions being drawn by Afshar. The results were published in a SPIE conference proceedings in 2005. A follow-up paper was published in a scientific journal Foundations of Physics in January 2007 and featured in New Scientist in February 2007.

Experimental setup

Fig.1 Experiment without obstructing wire grid
Fig.2 Experiment with obstructing wire grid and one pinhole covered
Fig.3 Experiment with wire grid and both pinholes open. The wires lie in the dark fringes and thus block very little light

The experiment uses a setup similar to that for the double-slit experiment. In Afshar's variant, light generated by a laser passes through two closely spaced circular pinholes (not slits). After the dual pinholes, a lens refocuses the light so that the image of each pinhole falls on separate photon-detectors (Fig. 1). With pinhole 2 closed, a photon that goes through pinhole 1 impinges only on photon detector 1. Similarly, with pinhole 1 closed, a photon that goes through pinhole 2 impinges only on photon detector 2. With both pinholes open, Afshar claims, citing Wheeler in support, that pinhole 1 remains correlated to photon Detector 1 (and vice versa for pinhole 2 to photon Detector 2), and therefore that which-way information is preserved when both pinholes are open.

When the light acts as a wave, because of quantum interference one can observe that there are regions that the photons avoid, called dark fringes. A grid of thin wires is placed just before the lens (Fig. 2) so that the wires lie in the dark fringes of an interference pattern which is produced by the dual pinhole setup. If one of the pinholes is blocked, the interference pattern will no longer be formed, and the grid of wires causes appreciable diffraction in the light and blocks some of it from detection by the corresponding photon detector. However, when both pinholes are open, the effect of the wires is negligible, comparable to the case in which there are no wires placed in front of the lens (Fig. 3), because the wires lie in the dark fringes of an interference pattern. The effect is not dependent on the light intensity (photon flux).

Afshar's interpretation

Afshar's conclusion is that, when both pinholes are open, the light exhibits wave-like behavior when going past the wires, since the light goes through the spaces between the wires but avoids the wires themselves, but also exhibits particle-like behavior after going through the lens, with photons going to a correlated photo-detector. Afshar argues that this behavior contradicts the principle of complementarity to the extent that it shows both wave and particle characteristics in the same experiment for the same photons.

Afshar asserts that there is simultaneously high visibility V of interference as well as high distinguishability D (corresponding to which-path information), so that V + D > 1, and the wave-particle duality relation is violated.

Reception

Specific criticism

A number of scientists have published criticisms of Afshar's interpretation of his results, some of which reject the claims of a violation of complementarity, while differing in the way they explain how complementarity copes with the experiment. For example, one paper contests Afshar's core claim, that the Englert–Greenberger duality relation is violated. The researchers re-ran the experiment, using a different method for measuring the visibility of the interference pattern than that used by Afshar, and found no violation of complementarity, concluding "This result demonstrates that the experiment can be perfectly explained by the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics."

Below is a synopsis of papers by several critics highlighting their main arguments and the disagreements they have amongst themselves:

  • Ruth Kastner, Committee on the History and Philosophy of Science, University of Maryland, College Park.
    Kastner's criticism, published in a peer-reviewed paper, proceeds by setting up a thought experiment and applying Afshar's logic to it to expose its flaw. She proposes that Afshar's experiment is equivalent to preparing an electron in a spin-up state and then measuring its sideways spin. This does not imply that one has found out the up-down spin state and the sideways spin state of any electron simultaneously. Applied to Afshar's experiment: "Nevertheless, even with the grid removed, since the photon is prepared in a superposition S, the measurement at the final screen at t2 never really is a 'which-way' measurement (the term traditionally attached to the slit-basis observable O {\displaystyle {\mathcal {O}}} ), because it cannot tell us 'which slit the photon actually went through.'
  • Daniel Reitzner, Research Center for Quantum Information, Institute of Physics, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia.
    Reitzner performed numerical simulations, published in a preprint, of Afshar's arrangement and obtained the same results that Afshar obtained experimentally. From this he argues that the photons exhibit wave behavior, including high fringe visibility but no which-way information, up to the point they hit the detector: "In other words the two-peaked distribution is an interference pattern and the photon behaves as a wave and exhibits no particle properties until it hits the plate. As a result a which-way information can never be obtained in this way."
  • W. G. Unruh, Professor of Physics at University of British Columbia
    Unruh, like Kastner, proceeds by setting up an arrangement that he feels is equivalent but simpler. The size of the effect is larger so that it is easier to see the flaw in the logic. In Unruh's view that flaw is, in the case that an obstacle exists at the position of the dark fringes, "drawing the inference that IF the particle was detected in detector 1, THEN it must have come from path 1. Similarly, IF it were detected in detector 2, then it came from path 2." In other words, he accepts the existence of an interference pattern but rejects the existence of which-way information.
  • Luboš Motl, Former assistant professor of physics, Harvard University.
    Motl's criticism, published in his blog, is based on an analysis of Afshar's actual setup, instead of proposing a different experiment like Unruh and Kastner. In contrast to Unruh and Kastner, he believes that which-way information always exists, but argues that the measured contrast of the interference pattern is actually very low: "Because this signal (disruption) from the second, middle picture is small (equivalently, it only affects a very small portion of the photons), the contrast V is also very small, and goes to zero for infinitely thin wires." He also argues that the experiment can be understood with classical electrodynamics and has "nothing to do with quantum mechanics".
  • Ole Steuernagel, School of Physics, Astronomy and Mathematics, University of Hertfordshire, UK.
    Steuernagel makes a quantitative analysis of the various transmitted, refracted, and reflected modes in a setup that differs only slightly from Afshar's. He concludes that the Englert-Greenberger duality relation is strictly satisfied, and in particular that the fringe visibility for thin wires is small. Like some of the other critics, he emphasizes that inferring an interference pattern is not the same as measuring one: "Finally, the greatest weakness in the analysis given by Afshar is the inference that an interference pattern must be present."
  • Andrew Knight, Department of Physics, New York University
    Argues that Afshar's claim to violate complementarity is a simple logical inconsistency: by setting up the experiment so that photons are spatially coherent over the two pinholes, the pinholes are necessarily indistinguishable by those photons. “In other words, Afshar et al. claim in one breath to have set up the experiment so that pinholes A and B are inherently indistinguishable by certain photons , and in another breath to have distinguished pinholes A and B with those same photons.”

Specific support

  • Afshar's coauthors Eduardo Flores and Ernst Knoesel criticize Kastner's setup and propose an alternative experimental setup. By removing the lens of Afshar and causing two beams to overlap at a small angle, Flores et al. aimed to show that conservation of momentum guarantee the preservation of which-path information when both pinholes are open. But this experiment is still subject to Motl's objection that the 2 beams have a sub-microscopic diffraction pattern created by the convergence of the beams before the slits; the result would have been the measuring of which slit was open before the wires were ever reached.

See also

References

  1. ^ Chown, Marcus (2004). "Quantum Rebel". New Scientist. 183 (2457): 30–35.(subscription required)
  2. ^ S. S. Afshar (2004). "Waving Copenhagen Good-bye: Were the founders of Quantum Mechanics wrong?". Harvard Seminar Announcement. Archived from the original on 2012-03-05. Retrieved 2013-12-01.
  3. ^ S. S. Afshar; E. Flores; K. F. McDonald; E. Knoesel (2007). "Paradox in wave-particle duality". Foundations of Physics. 37 (2): 295–305. arXiv:quant-ph/0702188. Bibcode:2007FoPh...37..295A. doi:10.1007/s10701-006-9102-8. S2CID 2161197.
  4. ^ S. S. Afshar (2005). Roychoudhuri, Chandrasekhar; Creath, Katherine (eds.). "Violation of the principle of complementarity, and its implications". Proceedings of SPIE. The Nature of Light: What Is a Photon?. 5866: 229–244. arXiv:quant-ph/0701027. Bibcode:2005SPIE.5866..229A. doi:10.1117/12.638774. S2CID 119375418.
  5. S. S. Afshar (2006). "Violation of Bohr's complementarity: One slit or both?". AIP Conference Proceedings. 810: 294–299. arXiv:quant-ph/0701039. Bibcode:2006AIPC..810..294A. doi:10.1063/1.2158731. S2CID 117905639.
  6. J. Zheng; C. Zheng (2011). "Variant simulation system using quaternion structures". Journal of Modern Optics. 59 (5): 484. Bibcode:2012JMOp...59..484Z. doi:10.1080/09500340.2011.636152. S2CID 121934786.
  7. Georgiev, Danko (2012-01-26). "Quantum Histories and Quantum Complementarity". ISRN Mathematical Physics. 2012: 1–37. doi:10.5402/2012/327278. ISSN 2090-4681.
  8. ^ R. Kastner (2005). "Why the Afshar experiment does not refute complementarity?". Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics. 36 (4): 649–658. arXiv:quant-ph/0502021. Bibcode:2005SHPMP..36..649K. doi:10.1016/j.shpsb.2005.04.006. S2CID 119438183.
  9. ^ O. Steuernagel (2007). "Afshar's experiment does not show a violation of complementarity". Foundations of Physics. 37 (9): 1370. arXiv:quant-ph/0512123. Bibcode:2007FoPh...37.1370S. doi:10.1007/s10701-007-9153-5. S2CID 53056142.
  10. ^ V. Jacques; et al. (2008). "Illustration of quantum complementarity using single photons interfering on a grating". New Journal of Physics. 10 (12): 123009. arXiv:0807.5079. Bibcode:2008NJPh...10l3009J. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/10/12/123009. S2CID 2627030.
  11. D. D. Georgiev (2012). "Quantum histories and quantum complementarity". ISRN Mathematical Physics. 2012: 327278. doi:10.5402/2012/327278.
  12. "Institute for Radiation-Induced Mass Studies (IRIMS)". irims.org. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
  13. Afshar's Quantum Bomshell Science Friday
  14. J. G. Cramer (2004). "Bohr is still wrong". New Scientist. 183 (2461): 26.
  15. Chown, Marcus (2007). "Quantum rebel wins over doubters". New Scientist. 197 (2591): 13.(subscription required)
  16. Wheeler, John (1978). Mathematical foundations of quantum theory. Elsevier. pp. 9–48.
  17. R. E. Kastner (2006). "The Afshar Experiment and Complementarity". APS Meeting, March 13–17, Baltimore, Maryland: 40011. Bibcode:2006APS..MARD40011K.
  18. D. Reitzner (2007). "Comment on Afshar's experiments". arXiv:quant-ph/0701152.
  19. W. Unruh (2004). "Shahriar Afshar – Quantum Rebel?".
  20. L. Motl (2004). "Violation of complementarity?".
  21. Andrew Knight (2020). "No Paradox in Wave-Particle Duality". Foundations of Physics. 50 (11): 1723–1727. arXiv:2006.05315. Bibcode:2020FoPh...50.1723K. doi:10.1007/s10701-020-00379-9. S2CID 219559143.
  22. E. Flores and E. Knoesel (2007). "Why Kastner analysis does not apply to a modified Afshar experiment". In Roychoudhuri, Chandrasekhar; Kracklauer, Al F; Creath, Katherine (eds.). The Nature of Light: What Are Photons?. Vol. 6664. pp. 66640O. arXiv:quant-ph/0702210. doi:10.1117/12.730965. S2CID 119028739.
  23. J. G. Cramer (2005). "A farewell to Copenhagen?". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. Archived from the original on 2004-12-08. Retrieved 2004-12-21.
  24. Cramer, JG (2015). The Quantum Handshake: Entanglement, Nonlocality and Transactions. Springer Verlag. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-3-319-24642-0.
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