Interferometers with unequal arm lengths

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the behavior of a Michelson interferometer with unequal arm lengths, specifically whether interference occurs when photons are sent through the apparatus one at a time. Participants explore the implications of timing and path information on interference patterns, drawing parallels to the double slit experiment.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions whether interference is observed after one second, one minute, or at another time when using unequal arm lengths in a Michelson interferometer.
  • Another participant clarifies that interference involves mixing two beams, which may differ from the double slit setup, and requests clarification on the original question.
  • Some participants suggest that if the arms of the interferometer are unequal, measuring the time from emission to detection could provide which-path information, potentially destroying interference.
  • There is a discussion about the role of polarizers in the double slit experiment, where the presence of which-path information affects interference patterns.
  • Questions arise about whether quantum mechanics imposes limitations on measuring flight times of photons and how this relates to the presence or absence of interference fringes in both the interferometer and double slit scenarios.
  • One participant notes that entangled particles do not exhibit interference effects due to the potential for determining which-path information.
  • Another participant inquires about the quantum effects that might prevent measuring flight times in the double slit experiment, seeking to understand the differences in measurement capabilities between the two setups.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying views on the relationship between path information and interference, with some agreeing that the potential to measure flight times affects interference, while others question the specifics of quantum mechanics that might limit such measurements. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the exact nature of these quantum effects.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge that measuring flight times may be complicated by quantum mechanical principles, but the specifics of these principles and their implications for interference patterns are not fully clarified. There is also a recognition that the ability to gain which-path information is central to the discussion.

alanf
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One arm of a Michelson interferometer is one light second long, the other is one light minute long. We run photons through it one at a time. Do we see interference? And if so, when? After one second? One minute? Some other time?

I've been reading a number (too many!) "layman's" books on quantum mechanics, and each time I read about the double slit experiment this question nags at me. (Certainly the slits aren't at precisely equivalent distances from the light source.) And I'm still unable to answer it. But I'm sure you folks can. I hope you all won't mind an inquiry from an amateur. :)
 
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Welcome to PhysicsForums, alanf!

The interference from an interferometer involves mixing 2 beams so there is constructive or destructive interference at a particular place at the same time. This is similar, but a little different from, what you get with a double slit setup.

Since you mixed references to these, is there any chance you might clarify your question?
 
Hi Dr. C! I only brought up the double slit experiment because the issue seems similar to me. If the slits aren't the same distance from the light source, simply by measuring the time from emission to detection, an observer should be able to determine which slit - and similarly, which arm of the interferometer - each photon passed through, destroying the interference. But I'm guessing it's more complicated than that.
 
alanf said:
Hi Dr. C! I only brought up the double slit experiment because the issue seems similar to me. If the slits aren't the same distance from the light source, simply by measuring the time from emission to detection, an observer should be able to determine which slit - and similarly, which arm of the interferometer - each photon passed through, destroying the interference. But I'm guessing it's more complicated than that.

Yes, you are correct. For the double slit, any technique that yields which path information will eliminate the interference. And that can be done a variety of ways, including timing/path length. I think one of the best to picture the situation is this:

Take a double slit setup using light. Place one polarizer over the left slit at angle L, another over the right slit at angle R. When L-R=0, there IS interference. When L-R=90 degrees, there is NO interference. Obviously, the presence or absence of a polarizer does not change anything unless which slit information is gained. That becomes progressively more feasible as L-R goes from 0 to 90 degrees. In other words: you *could* know which path (100%) certain) by checking the polarization of the detected photon when L-R=90 (crossed), even if you didn't.
 
That's a clever experiment, one which I've never seen described in any of the lay discussions of the subject. So you don't actually have to check the polarity of the arriving photon. It's enough simply that you *could* check?

So how can the double slit experiment work? Is there some quantum mechanical issue preventing us from measuring each photon's flight time, and thus determining the route? And if so, what about the interferometer? No interference fringes there because we actually can measure the flight time? And would the interference fringes show up when we make the variance in distance small enough that the quantum issue - whatever it is - prevents us from measuring the flight time?
 
alanf said:
That's a clever experiment, one which I've never seen described in any of the lay discussions of the subject. So you don't actually have to check the polarity of the arriving photon. It's enough simply that you *could* check?

So how can the double slit experiment work? Is there some quantum mechanical issue preventing us from measuring each photon's flight time, and thus determining the route? And if so, what about the interferometer? No interference fringes there because we actually can measure the flight time? And would the interference fringes show up when we make the variance in distance small enough that the quantum issue - whatever it is - prevents us from measuring the flight time?

"...That you could check" is exactly right. When people talk about observers, it's the "could" that really matters, not that a real person or cat or atom is around to do it.
 
Thanks Misericorde. So to go back to the double slit experiment, what is it that prevents us from measuring the flight time of the photon, and thus determining which slit it went through (assuming the source-slit-detector distance is not precisely the same for each slit), and destroying the interference?
 
alanf said:
Thanks Misericorde. So to go back to the double slit experiment, what is it that prevents us from measuring the flight time of the photon, and thus determining which slit it went through (assuming the source-slit-detector distance is not precisely the same for each slit), and destroying the interference?

Nothing, really. Although that is more easily said than done. When was it emitted? How do you know there was only one?

Here is an interesting fact: entangled particles do NOT* exhibit interference effects! Because then you could determine the answers to the above questions!

*with a minor exception: when which path information is fully erased.
 
So to take the easier case - the interferometer with widely differing arm lengths - no interference, because we could easily determine the path the photon took with a simple stopwatch? What prevents us from doing the same with the double slit experiment? Of course we'd need something more sophisticated than a stopwatch, but I take it from what you said earlier that the measuring equipment isn't the issue - it's whether the time could ever be determined, or whether some quantum effect prevents us from doing so. If that's right, what is that quantum effect? Thanks for all the info so far. I'm learning much more here than with the "quantum mechanics for amateurs" books.
 
  • #10
Can you gain information that a pair of particles is entangled by running this test, or would the test lead to decoherence?
 

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