Wave--particle transition and quantum Zeno effect in which-way experiments with a superconducting quantum processor
Shiyu Wang, Zhiguang Yan, Clemens Gneiting, Rui Li, Franco Nori, Yasunobu Nakamura

TL;DR
This study uses a superconducting quantum processor to explore wave-particle duality, demonstrating the transition from wave-like to particle-like behavior, and observing the quantum Zeno effect through controlled measurements.
Contribution
First implementation of Mach-Zehnder interferometry on a 2D superconducting quantum processor with controlled which-way measurement strength.
Findings
Demonstrated wave-particle transition with controlled measurement
Showed which-way measurements break entanglement and coherence
Observed quantum Zeno effect affecting interferometer dynamics
Abstract
Wave--particle duality demonstrates the peculiar nature of quantum mechanics. In which-way experiments, depending on the measurement scheme, a particle exhibits either wave-like or particle-like properties, as summarized by Bohr's principle of complementarity. In this work, we implement Mach-Zehnder (MZ) interferometry on a two-dimensional (2D) superconducting quantum processor. With precise control of the which-way measurement strength, we demonstrate the transition of a photon from wave-like to particle-like behavior. Furthermore, by performing quantum state tomography on two qubits located in the two paths, we demonstrate that which-way measurements break the entanglement and coherence between the two paths and cause information leakage from the quantum system to the environment. To capture this behavior quantitatively, we derive complementarity relations between the entropy and the…
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