Testing the equivalence principle with time-diffracted free-falling quantum particles
Juan A. Ca\~nas, J. Bernal, and A. Mart\'in-Ruiz

TL;DR
This paper investigates potential quantum violations of the equivalence principle through matter wave diffraction experiments, revealing mass-dependent effects and violations at the quantum level, with implications for ultracold atoms and neutrons.
Contribution
It introduces a novel quantum test of the equivalence principle using diffraction in time of matter waves, highlighting violations at the quantum scale and their suppression at large masses.
Findings
Quantum oscillations depend on particle mass, indicating violations.
Both weak and strong equivalence principles are violated in quantum regimes.
Violations diminish as particle mass increases, restoring classical behavior.
Abstract
The equivalence principle of gravity is examined at the quantum level using the diffraction in time of matter waves in two ways. First, we consider a quasi-monochromatic beam of particles incident on a shutter which is removed at time and fall due to the gravitational field. The probability density exhibits a set of mass-dependent oscillations which are genuinely quantum in nature, thereby reflecting quantum violations to the weak equivalence principle, although the strong equivalence principle remains valid. We estimate the degree of violation in terms of the width of the diffraction-in-time effect. Second, motivated by the recent advances in the manipulation of ultracold atoms and neutrons as well as the experimental observation of quantum states of ultracold neutrons in the gravitational field above a flat mirror, we study the diffraction in time of a suddenly released beam…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
