Questions about the Double Slit Experiment

In summary: I've heard can be done to light simply by shining it through some sort of crystal... I'm probably butchering the explanation all to hell, so feel free to correct me :)
  • #1
caibbor
19
0
The double slit experiment shows that light is a wave, unless observed at the point where photons enter the slits. If observed there, the result of the experiment shows light as particles. What I want to know is:

1.) What instruments are used to observe the photons as it passes through the slits?

2.) Is it possible that the instruments themselves cause the interference, instead of just the fact that they are being observed?

3.) Why doesn't simply observing with the naked eye that light is going into the slits suffice to "change the physical state" of the light from waves to particles?
 
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  • #2
Good question.
What happens when the screen is our retina?
 
  • #3
The rule is: there is NO interference pattern if it is possible, in principle, to know which slit the photon takes.

Imagine that the Left (L) slit has a polarizer oriented at 0 degrees in front of it, and the Right (R) slit does as well. A suitable source (say oriented at 45 degrees) will generate an interference pattern. Any photon arriving at the screen could have gone through either/both slits (although half of the light will not pass the polarizers).

BUT... orient the R polarizer to 90 degrees (keeping the L polarizer at 0 degrees) and the interference pattern will disappear completely. The reason is that it is now possible to figure out whether a photon hitting the screen when L or R by checking its polarization. Note that it matters not whether you actually take this last step. (Half of the light still will not pass the polarizers.)

So it is clearly not the polarizers themselves that individually affect the outcome, it is the *relationship* of the polarizers that controls.
 
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  • #4
I have no background in physics whatsoever, so forgive me for such basic questions, but how does a polarizer detect which slit a single photon goes through? If the photon goes straight from source to destination without hitting the polarizer, how can it be detected?
 
  • #5
caibbor said:
I have no background in physics whatsoever, so forgive me for such basic questions, but how does a polarizer detect which slit a single photon goes through? If the photon goes straight from source to destination without hitting the polarizer, how can it be detected?

You misunderstand. The half of the light that is blocked by the polarizers doesn't make it to the screen.
 
  • #6
I'm currently trying to figure out exactly what "polarized light" means. Before today, I've never heard of a polarizer. (and also what it means to orient one)
 
  • #7
Have you heard about "polarized sunglasses"? It is the same thing. Light has a property called polarization.

And while you may not understand it, the point is that experiments have already been done which support current theory and refute the idea that the measurement device itself creates or destroys interference. In fact, it is the entire setup which must be considered.

I would recommend that you spend some time learning about this fascinating subject. I assure you it will not be wasted! :smile:
 
  • #8
That's why I'm here! :-D

I have no doubts that my questions will have absolutely no impact on this field, i assure you ;)

I spent some time researching this and also found out about the Quantum Eraser test, and the Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser Test, and my questions are now answered.

I'm just a computer scientist but this quantum mechanics stuff in particular has been fascinating me for a long time. I'd like to go so far as to actually perform the test myself just for the sheer thrill of actually seeing this work if it wouldn't be terribly expensive. To flip a switch and see the light inside a box go from two bars to several simply at the flip of a seemingly unrelated button... that would be amazing.

I guess my next big question is how to quantum entangle particles - which I've heard can be done to light simply by shining it through some sort of crystal... I'm probably butchering the explanation all to hell, so feel free to correct me :)
 
  • #9
caibbor said:
That's why I'm here! :-D

I have no doubts that my questions will have absolutely no impact on this field, i assure you ;)

I spent some time researching this and also found out about the Quantum Eraser test, and the Delayed Choice Quantum Eraser Test, and my questions are now answered.

I'm just a computer scientist but this quantum mechanics stuff in particular has been fascinating me for a long time. I'd like to go so far as to actually perform the test myself just for the sheer thrill of actually seeing this work if it wouldn't be terribly expensive. To flip a switch and see the light inside a box go from two bars to several simply at the flip of a seemingly unrelated button... that would be amazing.

I guess my next big question is how to quantum entangle particles - which I've heard can be done to light simply by shining it through some sort of crystal... I'm probably butchering the explanation all to hell, so feel free to correct me :)

The double slit experiment can be created with things that you almost certainly already own, but it might get a bit fiddly.

A quantum erasor setup would be pretty cheap. You might even be able to perform this with those semi-disposable 3d glasses that are given out at cinemas.

Although creating entangled photons is going to be cheap, actually measuring the entanglement isn't going to be something you'd want to spend money on just to prove it to yourself, once.
 
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  • #10
Is our retina screen a which path detector?
 
  • #11
naima said:
Is our retina screen a which path detector?

No. Like a piece of photographic film or a collection of photodetectors, it will register whether or not it's being hit by light no matter what path the light took to get there.
 
  • #12
naima said:
Is our retina screen a which path detector?

It depends where you put it. If it's actually at one of the slits then yes.

If it's at a distance of the projection of interference pattern then no.

Undoubtedly, you've already seen notable interference patterns detected by your own retina. Have you ever noticed the rainbow pattern when you look at a layer of oil on of a puddle?

Interference patterns are even generated inside the eye. I remember as a very small child noticing in certain lighting conditions, little circular fringes drifting across my vision. You've possibly noticed them too. It was many years before I could explain what was actually happening.

Obviously, be careful with bright light sources when using the eye as a detector.
 
  • #13
Haroche gives the general answer to the coherence reapparance after a which path meaurement. read p 77 of "Exploring the Quantum: Atoms, Cavities, and Photons".
The information about the path is stored in a huge number of atoms, photons in the environment.
You would have to erase all the subsystems of the environment where the information is imprinted.
 
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  • #14
naima said:
Haroche gives the general answer to the coherence reapparance after a which path meaurement. read p 77 of "Exploring the Quantum: Atoms, Cavities, and Photons".
The information about the path is stored in a huge number of atoms, photons in the environment.
You would have to erase all the subsystems of the environment where the information is imprinted.

Hm, I'm actually in the market for a good elementary book on QM. The Foreword (as I can read on Amazon) says the book is just about right for that purpose. Are there others you might recommend keeping in mind that I'm not terribly mathematically inclined? (I can bang out some trig but when it comes to more complicated things like calculus, I'd have to really hit the books...)
 
  • #15
caibbor said:
Hm, I'm actually in the market for a good elementary book on QM. The Foreword (as I can read on Amazon) says the book is just about right for that purpose. Are there others you might recommend keeping in mind that I'm not terribly mathematically inclined? (I can bang out some trig but when it comes to more complicated things like calculus, I'd have to really hit the books...)

The Quantum Universe ( https://www.amazon.com/dp/0306821443/?tag=pfamazon01-20 )
Sneaking a Look at God's Cards ( https://www.amazon.com/dp/069113037X/?tag=pfamazon01-20 )
Quantum Reality: Theory and Philosophy ( https://www.amazon.com/dp/1584887036/?tag=pfamazon01-20 )
The Quantum Challenge ( https://www.amazon.com/dp/076372470X/?tag=pfamazon01-20 )
 
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  • #16
craigi said:
It depends where you put it. If it's actually at one of the slits then yes.

If it's at a distance of the projection of interference pattern then no.

Undoubtedly, you've already seen notable interference patterns detected by your own retina. Have you ever noticed the rainbow pattern when you look at a layer of oil on of a puddle?

Interference patterns are even generated inside the eye. I remember as a very small child noticing in certain lighting conditions, little circular fringes drifting across my vision. You've possibly noticed them too. It was many years before I could explain what was actually happening.

Obviously, be careful with bright light sources when using the eye as a detector.

Is that the same for a rainbow too?
 
  • #17
Jilang said:
Is that the same for a rainbow too?

No.

Rainbows are caused by the dispersion of light when it undergoes refraction. We don't need multiple paths to explain this phenomenon.
 
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  • #18
caibbor said:
Hm, I'm actually in the market for a good elementary book on QM. The Foreword (as I can read on Amazon) says the book is just about right for that purpose. Are there others you might recommend keeping in mind that I'm not terribly mathematically inclined? (I can bang out some trig but when it comes to more complicated things like calculus, I'd have to really hit the books...)

Yes - but its worth it. You really need the math to understand it properly.

Start with Lenny Susskinds book on Classical Mechanics:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/046502811X/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Then his new book on QM once its released:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0465036678/?tag=pfamazon01-20

The video lectures associated with the books can be found here:
http://theoreticalminimum.com/biography

Please do make the effort to come to grips with calculus - its will require a bit of effort, but well worth it.

Check out the following as a start - its actually good enough to get you started:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0471827223/?tag=pfamazon01-20

If you want to go a bit deeper, here is a nice free resource for learning it:
http://ocw.mit.edu/resources/res-18-001-calculus-online-textbook-spring-2005/textbook/

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #19
caibbor said:
I'm just a computer scientist but this quantum mechanics stuff in particular has been fascinating me for a long time.
Cool - then you and I have the same background and another shared interest :smile:.

caibbor said:
I'd like to go so far as to actually perform the test myself just for the sheer thrill of actually seeing this work if it wouldn't be terribly expensive. To flip a switch and see the light inside a box go from two bars to several simply at the flip of a seemingly unrelated button... that would be amazing.

The basic double-slit experiment (with photons/light) is very easy to do; in fact I wrote a blog post on how to do it at home, since I noticed there are people interested in trying it. In my post there are also other links and instructional videos. (I have actually done new DSE experiments at home recently with a better laser module, but I haven't updated my blog yet, I'm going to try to get some really good pictures of the interference patterns if I can.) Anyway, I sincerely recommend doing the DSE at home - it's a real kick to see it in action.

Quantum eraser: Scientific American had an article about a DIY experiment: http://www.scientificamerican.com/slideshow.cfm?id=a-do-it-yourself-quantum-eraser. I haven't tried that myself (yet :smile:).

caibbor said:
I guess my next big question is how to quantum entangle particles - which I've heard can be done to light simply by shining it through some sort of crystal... I'm probably butchering the explanation all to hell, so feel free to correct me :)

Entanglement experiments are a bit harder; you'll need a laser source, a special crystal, polarizers and photodetectors connected to equipment which counts detections (coincidence counting). You could check out this forum thread (Detecting entangled photons) for more info and a couple of links.

Anyway, please note and always remember that lasers, and thus laser experiments, should be handled with care: Laser safety.

This video should also be interesting; The Original Double Slit Experiment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iuv6hY6zsd0
 
  • #20
Hi guys,
I am just wondering: what is the minimal speed of let say an electron which is sufficient for the observation of the double slit experiment effect? Are there actually any experiments about this?

Have spent some time googling it, but nothing obvious popped out.
 
  • #21
yapi said:
Hi guys,
I am just wondering: what is the minimal speed of let say an electron which is sufficient for the observation of the double slit experiment effect? Are there actually any experiments about this?

Have spent some time googling it, but nothing obvious popped out.

Historically, this was studied by De Broglie. He developed equations that will answer your question.

You'll need to use them in conjunction with a little trigonometry to work out the scale of the experimental set up.
 
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  • #22
It isn't so much that "one can know" which slit, but that the particle going through a slit becomes different than a particle through the other slit, so they are no longer coherent. The loss of coherence means no interference pattern. When you learn the math you will see easily that if the paths are not identical, there will be no interference.

I think the best introduction is actually Susskind's entanglement lectures. It's a fascinating self contained look at QM with a high level overview of the math.

http://theoreticalminimum.com/courses/quantum-entanglement/2006/fall

And there are lecture notes here.
http://www.lecture-notes.co.uk/susskind/quantum-entanglements/lecture-1/
 

1. What is the Double Slit Experiment?

The Double Slit Experiment is a famous physics experiment that demonstrates the wave-particle duality of light. It involves shining a beam of light through two parallel slits and observing the resulting pattern on a screen behind the slits.

2. How does the Double Slit Experiment illustrate wave-particle duality?

The experiment shows that light behaves as both a wave and a particle. When the beam of light is passed through the slits, it diffracts and creates an interference pattern, similar to how waves behave. However, when the light is observed at the screen, it appears as individual particles, or photons, hitting the screen at specific points.

3. What is the significance of the Double Slit Experiment?

The Double Slit Experiment challenges our understanding of the nature of light and matter. It suggests that particles can exhibit wave-like behavior and vice versa, and it has played a crucial role in developing the theory of quantum mechanics.

4. Can the Double Slit Experiment be replicated with other particles?

Yes, the experiment has been replicated with electrons, protons, and even large molecules. The results are the same, indicating that this phenomenon is not limited to just light, but is a fundamental property of particles.

5. How does the Double Slit Experiment relate to the observer effect?

The Double Slit Experiment is often used to explain the observer effect, which states that the act of observing something can influence its behavior. In this experiment, the act of observing the light particles changes their behavior from a wave to a particle. This highlights the delicate relationship between the observer and the observed in the quantum world.

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