The Mach-Zehnder Interferometer and Photon Dualism: with an Analysis of Nonlocality
Paul A. Klevgard

TL;DR
This paper explores the wave-particle duality of photons using the Mach-Zehnder Interferometer, proposing that photons have two identities—one supporting particle features and the other wave features—to explain nonlocality and related quantum phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces a dual-identity model of photons, distinguishing between kinetic energy in time and probability waves in space, to clarify wave-particle duality and quantum nonlocality.
Findings
Photon kinetic energy resides in time and does not diffract.
Photon probability waves diffract and interfere in space.
The dual-identity model explains nonlocality and measurement issues.
Abstract
The Mach-Zehnder Interferometer (MZI) is chosen to illustrate the long-standing wave particle duality problem. Why is which-way (welcher weg) information incompatible with wave interference? How to explain Wheeler's delayed choice experiment? Most crucially, how can the photon divide at the first beam splitter and yet terminate on either arm with its undiminished energy? The position advanced is that the photon has two identities, one supporting particle features and the other wave features. There is photon kinetic energy that never splits (on half-silvered mirrors) or diffracts (in pinholes or slits). Then there are photon probability waves that do diffract and can reinforce or cancel. Photon kinetic energy is oscillatory; its cycles require/occupy time. E = mc2 suggests that kinetic energy is physically real as occurrence in time just as rest mass is physically real as existence in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
