Semitransparency in interaction-free measurements
Sebastian Thomas, Christoph Kohstall, Pieter Kruit, Peter Hommelhoff

TL;DR
This paper explores how semitransparency affects interaction-free quantum measurements, especially in electron microscopy, showing conditions where such measurements reduce sample damage compared to classical methods.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of semitransparent samples in interaction-free measurements, including strategies to minimize probe particle loss and conditions for quantum advantage.
Findings
Interaction-free measurements can distinguish high-contrast samples with less particle loss.
Zero-loss interaction-free measurements are possible with perfectly transparent samples.
Quantum advantage occurs when certain conditions on source statistics and transparency are met.
Abstract
We discuss the effect of semitransparency in a quantum-Zeno-like interaction-free measurement setup, a quantum-physics based approach that might significantly reduce sample damage in imaging and microscopy. With an emphasis on applications in electron microscopy, we simulate the behavior of probe particles in an interaction-free measurement setup with semitransparent samples, and we show that the transparency of a sample can be measured in such a setup. However, such a measurement is not possible without losing (i.e., absorbing or scattering) probe particles in general, which causes sample damage. We show how the amount of lost particles can be minimized by adjusting the number of round trips through the setup, and we explicitly calculate the amount of lost particles in measurements which either aim at distinguishing two transparencies or at measuring an unknown transparency precisely.…
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