In a double slit interference experiment, the wave function at the screen with both slits open is not exactly equal to the sum of the wave functions with the slits individually open one at a time. The three scenarios represent three different boundary conditions and as such, the superposition principle should not be applicable. However, most well-known text books in quantum mechanics implicitly and/or explicitly use this assumption that is only approximately true. In our present study, we have used the Feynman path integral formalism to quantify contributions from nonclassical paths in quantum interference experiments that provide a measurable deviation from a naive application of the superposition principle. A direct experimental demonstration for the existence of these nonclassical paths is difficult to present. We find that contributions from such paths can be significant and we propose simple three-slit interference experiments to directly confirm their existence.
Nonclassical paths in quantum interference experiments.
Rahul Sawant,J. Samuel,Aninda Sinha,S. Sinha,U. Sinha
Published 2013 in Physical Review Letters
ABSTRACT
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- Publication year
2013
- Venue
Physical Review Letters
- Publication date
2013-08-09
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Mathematics
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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