# Response to the Comment on "Paradox of Photons Disconnected Trajectories   Being Located by Means of "Weak Measurements" in the Nested Mach-Zehnder   Interferometer" (JETP Letters 105, 152 (2017))

**Authors:** Gennady N. Nikolaev

arXiv: 1705.08721 · 2017-06-28

## TL;DR

This paper defends the classical wave theory explanation for the paradoxical results in a photon trajectory experiment, arguing that the proposed modifications resolve perceived discontinuities and that criticisms against this approach are unfounded.

## Contribution

It clarifies that the paradoxical results are due to detection methods, not actual discontinuous photon trajectories, and defends the original classical wave explanation against recent criticisms.

## Key findings

- The experiment's paradoxical results are explained by detection methods.
- Proposed modifications eliminate the perceived discontinuity.
- Criticisms against the classical wave explanation are unfounded.

## Abstract

In [JETP Lett. 105(3), 152 (2017)], a clear and comprehensive analysis of the paradoxical results of experiment [Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 240402 (2013)] was carried out on the basis of the classical wave theory of light, which presupposes the continuity of possible of light paths. It was shown that the paradoxical results of the experiment are due not to the discontinuity of the trajectories of light, as claimed in [Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 240402 (2013)], but to the used way of detecting the path of photons. The experiment modification proposed in [JETP Lett. 105(3), 152 (2017)] allows us to eliminate the seeming discontinuity of the light trajectories. In Comment [arXiv:1705.02137 (2017)] to the article such modification is declared unreasonable. This Response to the Comment shows that this statement is not based on clear and logical arguments. Instead, it is only asserted that the proposed modification "violates the faithfulness indication of the trace" of photons. Therefore, the Comment's criticism can not be considered as well-founded. Consequently, the conclusion of [JETP Lett. 105(3), 152 (2017)] that a new concept of disconnected trajectories proposed by the authors of work [Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 240402 (2013)] is unnecessary, remains valid.

## Full text

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## References

11 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.08721/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.08721