Suppose you have some experimental setup in which the photon interacts strongly with an object in the interference experiment, e.g. the photon bounces off a mirror if it mves through one of the two slits.
Decoherence destroying the interference pattern will then occur if the state of the mirror would be affected by the photon to such an extent that you could, in principle, examine the mirror and tell that the photon had bounced off the mirror and hence tell which path the photon has taken.
Thank you for you response Count (and others). Your feed back helps some, but I'm still somewhat foggy (afraid that's my typical state of mind). If in our double slit experiment, rather than a mirror we substitute photographic emulsion, the photon strike will have a "strong interaction", and record its point of impact by eliciting molecular changes in the emulsion. Yet, from what I have been told, the uncertainty of which slit it passed through might remain, thus maintaining its quantum superposition. As subsequent strikes accumulate over time. an interference pattern will be demonstrated on the emulsion. This would appear to be a macroscopic manifestation of an unresolved quantum system.
Given your example, and the follow-up explanations regarding the types of interactions/measurements that result in decoherence, I am left with the impression that the critical issue is in the information content of the process... not in any material change that occurs in the involved particles. Am I reading this right? If so, should I conclude that information is the fundamental substance of existence rather than matter and energy?