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Changing your mind in a hurry.


Changing your mind in a hurry

In the microcosmic world governed by quantum mechanics quantum mechanics: see quantum theory.
quantum mechanics

Branch of mathematical physics that deals with atomic and subatomic systems. It is concerned with phenomena that are so small-scale that they cannot be described in classical terms, and it is
, the observer doing experiments has an important, but not yet precisely defined, effect on the reality of the object being observed. As Carroll O. Alley of the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
  • University of Maryland, College Park, a research-extensive and flagship university; when the term "University of Maryland" is used without any qualification, it generally refers to this school
 at College Park puts it, "We have a role in creating." Specifically, if an experimenter sets up to look for the wave nature of light, that side of light's dual nature will show itself, but not the presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 equally existent particle nature. Conversely, an experimenter looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 photons -- the particulate aspect of light's being -- will see them but not waves. One question that arises is wether WETHER. A castrated ram, at least one year old in ark indictment it may be called a sheep. 4 Car. & Payne, 216; 19 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 351.  it makes any difference when the experimenter chooses what to look for: long before the apparatus is built, or while the light is on the way through it.

At least three "delayed choice" experiments, which test what happens if the experimenter does not choose until the light is moving through the apparatus, have been done. Alley reported on one conducted with his student Oleg G. Jakubowicz. A group from the University of Munich and the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching, West Germany -- T. Hellmuth, Arthur G. Zajonc and Herbert Walter--did the other two.

The Maryland experiment and one of the Garching experiments involve Mach-Zehnder interferometers, devices that take an incoming light pulse from a laser, split it in two with a half-silvered mirror, send the two halves over different paths and recombine re·com·bine
v.
To undergo or cause genetic recombination; form new combinations.
 them. This is a standard test of the wave nature of light: A wave splits in two, and when it is recombined it interferes -- that is, its brightness reinforces or cancels depending on whether the two half-beams are still in phase or not. To test the particle nature of light the experimenter leaves out a mirror that recombines the beams and puts particle detons, at the ends of the two paths. These record light as photons, and also tell over which path a given photon came through the apparatus. The delayed-choice part is to switch this second mirror in and out while a single laser pulse is traversing the apparatus. The switch flips in 1 nanosecond (1) One billionth of a second. Used to measure the speed of logic and memory chips, a nanosecond can be visualized by converting it to distance. In one nanosecond, electricity travels approximately a foot in a wire. .

One way of interpreting the wave-interference situation is to say that a single photon took both paths at once (a very mysterious thing, as a particle shouldn't be able to do that). In the words of John A. Wheeler of the University of Texas at Austin “University of Texas” redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System.
The University of Texas at Austin (often referred to as The University of Texas, UT Austin, UT, or Texas
, who inspired these experiments, the switching of the mirror then "decides whether the photon 'shall have come by one route or by both routes' after it has 'already done its travel.'"

The second Garching experiment is what the experimenters call a "quantum beat experiment." Laser pulses of 553 nanometers wavelength and 1.5 picoseconds duration excite a barium atom. They send it into a superposition su·per·po·si·tion  
n.
1. The act of superposing or the state of being superposed: "Yet another technique in the forensic specialist's repertoire is photo superposition" 
 of states in which it exists in two excited energy states at once. These states are linked together in a way analogous to the way wave and particle natures are linked.

The excited atom immediately reemits some light, and because of the superposition or linkage, the wavelengths that each of the two states might emit separately are combined in an interference or beat signal like two sound waves beating together. With a polarizer polarizer

an appliance for polarizing light.
, an experimenter can analyze this signal so as to separate the two wavelengths, but then the result is all one or all the other.

The whole process amounts to a photon leaving the laser and being absorbed and reemitted by the atom through either one of the linked excited states (no beat signal) or both of them at the same time (the beat signal). Switching the polarizer in and out after the reemission determines which mode appears.

So far, all three of these experiments support the conventional quantum wisdom that whether you make the choice before or after the event occurs, the effect of the choice is the same.
COPYRIGHT 1986 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1986, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:delayed choice experiments in quantum mechanics
Author:Thomsen, Dietrick E.
Publication:Science News
Date:Mar 1, 1986
Words:654
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