A generalised multipath delayed-choice experiment on a large-scale quantum nanophotonic chip
Xiaojiong Chen, Yaohao Deng, Shuheng Liu, Tanumoy Pramanik, Jun Mao,, Jueming Bao, Chonghao Zhai, Tianxiang Dai, Huihong Yuan, Jiajie Guo,, Shao-Ming Fei, Marcus Huber, Bo Tang, Yan Yang, Zhihua Li, Qiongyi He,, Qihuang Gong, Jianwei Wang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a large-scale quantum nanophotonic chip capable of performing generalized multipath delayed-choice experiments, advancing the control and understanding of wave-particle duality in quantum systems.
Contribution
It introduces a novel large-scale quantum nanophotonic platform for implementing multipath delayed-choice experiments, enabling new tests of quantum duality and superposition.
Findings
Successful realization of multipath delayed-choice experiment on a nanophotonic chip
Observation of wave-particle duality and superposition in a controlled setting
Validation of the duality relation D^2 + V^2 <= 1 in a complex quantum system
Abstract
Famous double-slit or double-path experiments, implemented in a Young's or Mach-Zehnder interferometer, have confirmed the dual nature of quantum matter, When a stream of photons, neutrons, atoms, or molecules, passes through two slits, either wave-like interference fringes build up on a screen, or particle-like which-path distribution can be ascertained. These quantum objects exhibit both wave and particle properties but exclusively, depending on the way they are measured. In an equivalent Mach-Zehnder configuration, the object displays either wave or particle nature in the presence or absence of a beamsplitter, respectively, that represents the choice of which-measurement. Wheeler further proposed a gedanken experiment, in which the choice of which-measurement is delayed, i.e. determined after the object has already entered the interferometer, so as to exclude the possibility of…
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