Weak measurement and weak values -- New insights and effects in reflectivity and scattering processes
C A Chatzidimitriou-Dreismann

TL;DR
This paper applies weak measurement theory to two-body scattering, predicting a novel quantum effect of apparent mass reduction in particles, supported by experimental results and with potential technological implications.
Contribution
It introduces a new quantum effect in scattering processes using weak measurement formalism, revealing a momentum transfer deficit and mass reduction not explainable by classical physics.
Findings
Prediction of a momentum transfer deficit in scattering
Experimental evidence supporting the quantum effect
Enhanced energy transfer observed in experiments
Abstract
Recently, the notions of Weak Measurement (WM), Weak Value (WV) and Two-State-Vector Formalism (TSVF), firstly introduced by Aharonov and collaborators, have extended the theoretical frame of standard quantum mechanics, thus providing a quantum-theoretical formalism for extracting new information from a system in the limit of small disturbance to its state. Here we provide an application to the case of two-body scattering with one body weakly interacting with its environment --- e.g. a neutron being scattered from a H2 molecule physisorbed in a carbon nanotube. In particular, we make contact with the field of incoherent inelastic neutron scattering from condensed systems. We provide a physically compelling prediction of a new quantum effect --- a momentum transfer deficit; or equivalently, an enhanced energy transfer; or an apparent reduction of the mass of the struck particle. E.g.,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNumerical methods in inverse problems · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
