Quantum eraser and super luminous communication

In summary, the lack of interference seen between entangled photons is due to the fact that they are very incoherent.
  • #1
alas666
11
2
Let say we take each of the entangled photons and send one of them to receiver and one to transmitter located light years away. On receiver side photon is passing through double slit and hitting the screen. On transmitter side there is movable light stop placed at the same optical distance from the source as receiver double slit. Without the transmitter light stop, receiver sees interference pattern on the screen, since each photon is free to choose which slit to go through. With light stop the transmitter photons are localized and measured in the plane that corresponds to the receiver slit and therefore localize their entangled partner position determining which slit receiver photon is going through. If my understanding holds this means that there is no interference at the receiver and effect takes place instantaneously. Right ?
 
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  • #2
alas666 said:
Let say we take each of the entangled photons and send one of them to receiver and one to transmitter located light years away. On receiver side photon is passing through double slit and hitting the screen. On transmitter side there is movable light stop placed at the same optical distance from the source as receiver double slit. Without the transmitter light stop, receiver sees interference pattern on the screen, since each photon is free to choose which slit to go through. With light stop the transmitter photons are localized and measured in the plane that corresponds to the receiver slit and therefore localize their entangled partner position determining which slit receiver photon is going through. If my understanding holds this means that there is no interference at the receiver and effect takes place instantaneously. Right ?

Don't fully understand this yet. However I am hoping to hear something interesting.

Perhaps the answer is:

there is never an interference pattern, even if no noise, in [edit] entangled photons...
 
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  • #3
assembly i describes has double slit (not present in original quantum eraser) so there is no reason to expect lack of interference if photons or their entanglement partners wave function have not collapsed yet. But if one side has been measured then interference seems to disappear ...
 
  • #4
As it happens, entangled photons do not produce interference patterns. The usually explanation is that the source is not coherent (because it does not have a point source).
 
  • #5
alas666 said:
assembly i describes has double slit (not present in original quantum eraser) so there is no reason to expect lack of interference if photons or their entanglement partners wave function have not collapsed yet. But if one side has been measured then interference seems to disappear ...

Having a double slit is not sufficient to see an interference pattern. You need a double slit and a light field where the coherence length is longer than the distance between the two slits. Entangled light is necessarily very incoherent, so you do not get an interference pattern of noticeable visibility under conditions that allow to preserve entanglement.

edit: DrChinese beat me to it. I should really type faster and stop making breaks while typing.
 
  • #6
DrChinese and Cthugha is lack of interference of entangled photons inherent phenomenon or it results from technological limitations of generating apparatus ?

After all, you could see interference fringes from a candle if slits are far enough from source and one use sensitive detector. Similarly, one could restrict photon generation area to the size that will produce detectable fringes (at the cost of intensity, perhaps).

On the other hand if entangled photons doesn't interfere because that is their nature, then inserting light stop on the transmitter path somehow ahead of receiver slits will destroy entanglement and produce "regular" photons which should restores fringes. This again could be exploit for on/off communication teletype. Or maybe not, tell me why.
 
  • #7
alas666 said:
DrChinese and Cthugha is lack of interference of entangled photons inherent phenomenon or it results from technological limitations of generating apparatus ?

Thisi is inherent. One can also show that single-photon interference and two-photon interference (as seen in experiments on entanglement) are complementary (Abouraddy et al., Phys. Rev. A 63, 063803 (2001)).

alas666 said:
After all, you could see interference fringes from a candle if slits are far enough from source and one use sensitive detector. Similarly, one could restrict photon generation area to the size that will produce detectable fringes (at the cost of intensity, perhaps).

Yes you can increase spatial coherence by increasing the distance between light source and slits. This even works for light from a PDC crystal. However, by doing so you destroy entanglement.The reason is simple. Momentum entanglement means roughly speaking that the emission angles are correlated. Therefore you need some minimal spread in possible emission angles. If you filter out just one of them for example, the light will not violate Bell's inequality anymore because you will only detect the same set of angles in every run. If you reduce the spread of angles, light becomes more coherent, but you destroy entanglement. If you increase the spread you get entanglement, but lose coherence. There is a small intermediate regime where you can get both, but only with heavily reduced visibility.
 
  • #8
Cthugha said:
...

edit: DrChinese beat me to it. I should really type faster and stop making breaks while typing.

I drink a lot of caffeine in the morning. :biggrin:

(Plus I knew what you would answer anyway...)
 
  • #9
DrChinese said:
I drink a lot of caffeine in the morning. :biggrin:

It is evening here, so no caffeine for me. That must be the bad excuse, ehem reason. :wink:

DrChinese said:
(Plus I knew what you would answer anyway...)

Help, I am predictable. But that question indeed comes up so often that it might be sensible to write a FAQ entry. On the other hand I am not sure whether it is that easy to formulate it in a "waterproof" manner. At least I suppose FAQ entries should be of higher quality than the average post.
 
  • #10
good posts DrChinese, Cthugha.

just to clarify, is the below correct?

entangled photons don't produce single-particle self interference

however they do interfere with each other...this is known as two-photon interference

and this interference can happen even without the (entangled) photons having to meet at a same point in time-space

in other words: two-photon interference can happen non-locally
 
  • #11
another clarification:

San K said:
entangled photons don't produce single-particle self interference

Is this behavior affected by what is happening to the entangled partner ? I mean, if entanglement is destroyed at some point in time is photon regaining its single particle interference skills ?
 
  • #12
alas666 said:
I mean, if entanglement is destroyed at some point in time is photon regaining its single particle interference skills ?

yes surely... the photon regains it's single particle interference properties...after "dis-entanglement"
 
  • #13
alas666 said:
another clarification:

Is this behavior affected by what is happening to the entangled partner ? I mean, if entanglement is destroyed at some point in time is photon regaining its single particle interference skills ?

No it does not - for its partner anyway. An action at Alice does not change what Bill sees in any way Bill can detect himself (i.e. without more info from Alice).
 
  • #14
DrChinese said:
No it does not - for its partner anyway. An action at Alice does not change what Bill sees in any way Bill can detect himself (i.e. without more info from Alice).

Thats about summarizes all the attempts to circumvent speed of light while building communication device. Glad to learn that, since I start to be afraid of retrocausality.
 

1. What is a quantum eraser?

A quantum eraser is a device that uses the principles of quantum mechanics to "erase" or alter the state of a quantum system. This can be used to manipulate the behavior of particles and enable the transmission of information through quantum communication.

2. How does a quantum eraser work?

A quantum eraser works by using two entangled particles, also known as "quantum pairs." These particles are connected in such a way that the actions of one particle will affect the other, regardless of the distance between them. By manipulating one of the particles, the state of the other particle can be altered, allowing for information to be transmitted between them.

3. What is super luminous communication?

Super luminous communication, also known as superluminal communication, is a hypothetical method of transmitting information at faster-than-light speeds. This concept is based on the principles of quantum entanglement and the use of a quantum eraser to manipulate the state of particles and transmit information through them.

4. Is super luminous communication possible?

At this time, super luminous communication is only a theoretical concept and has not been proven to be possible. While quantum entanglement has been observed and used for communication, the speed at which information can be transmitted through this method is limited by the speed of light. More research and advancements in quantum mechanics may make super luminous communication a possibility in the future.

5. What are the potential applications of quantum eraser and super luminous communication?

The potential applications of quantum eraser and super luminous communication include secure communication, quantum computing, and improving our understanding of the fundamental principles of quantum mechanics. It may also have applications in fields such as cryptography, telecommunications, and data storage.

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