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21 - Two-photon interferometry, the quantum measurement problem, and more

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Marlan O. Scully
Affiliation:
Texas A & M University
M. Suhail Zubairy
Affiliation:
Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad
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Summary

As was demonstrated in the previous chapter, the process of observation and acquisition of information or at least the possibility of ‘knowing’ (whether or not we bother to ‘look’) can profoundly change the outcome of an experiment. For example, in the case of the micromaser which-path detector, we do not need to ‘look at’ or ‘interrogate’ the masers in order to lose the interference cross term; it is enough that we could have known. Experiments along these lines provide a dramatic example of the importance of which-path, or ‘Welcher-Weg’, information.

The present chapter treats the Welcher-Weg quantum eraser problem from a different vantage. We first consider the interference of light as it is scattered from simple atomic systems consisting of single atoms located at two neighboring sites. From this simple model, we can gain a wealth of insight into such problems as complementarity, delayed choice, and the quantum eraser via field–field and photon–photon correlation functions, i.e., via G(1)(r, t) and G(2)(r,rt, t′). The chapter concludes with a demonstration that such considerations can, in principle, even lead to new kinds of high-resolution spectroscopy.

Type
Chapter
Information
Quantum Optics , pp. 582 - 623
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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