Entanglement-enabled delayed choice experiment
F. Kaiser, T. Coudreau, P. Milman, D. B. Ostrowsky, and S. Tanzilli

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates an experiment where entanglement enables a delayed choice between wave and particle behavior in photons, challenging classical notions of light's nature and showcasing quantum superposition effects.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental setup using entangled photons to perform a delayed choice test, with a quantum beam-splitter in superposition, advancing quantum measurement and complementarity understanding.
Findings
Successfully demonstrated morphing of photon behavior from wave to particle after detection
Used entanglement to implement a quantum beam-splitter in superposition
Challenged classical views of light as purely wave or particle
Abstract
Complementarity, that is the ability of a quantum object to behave either as a particle or as a wave, is one of the most intriguing features of quantum mechanics. An exemplary Gedanken experiment, emphasizing such a measurement-dependent nature, was suggested by Wheeler using single photons. The subtleness of the idea lies in the fact that the output beam-splitter of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer is put in or removed after a photon has already entered the interferometer, thus performing a delayed test of the wave-particle complementary behavior. Recently, it was proposed that using a quantum analogue of the output beam-splitter would permit carrying out this type of test after the detection of the photon and observing wave-particle superposition. In this paper we describe an experimental demonstration of these predictions using another extraordinary property of quantum systems,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics
