Physical Review Research (Apr 2022)

Quantifying the presence of a neutron in the paths of an interferometer

  • Hartmut Lemmel,
  • Niels Geerits,
  • Armin Danner,
  • Holger F. Hofmann,
  • Stephan Sponar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.023075
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
p. 023075

Abstract

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It is commonly assumed that no accurate experimental information can be obtained on the path taken by a particle when quantum interference between the paths is observed. However, recent progress in the measurement and control of quantum systems may provide the missing information by circumventing the conventional uncertainty limits. Here, we experimentally investigate the possibility that an individual neutron moving through a two-path interferometer may actually be physically distributed between the two paths. For this purpose, it is important to distinguish between the probability of finding the complete particle in one of the paths and the distribution of an individual particle over both paths. We accomplish this distinction by applying a magnetic field in only one of the paths and observing the exact value of its effect on the neutron spin in the two output ports of the interferometer. The results show that individual particles experience a specific fraction of the magnetic field applied in one of the paths, indicating that a fraction or even a multiple of the particle was present in the path before the interference of the two paths was registered. The obtained path presence equals the weak value of the path projector and is not a statistical average but applies to every individual neutron, verified by the recently introduced method of feedback compensation.