Double-Slit Interference w/ Separate Sources

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of coherence and interference in a double slit experiment with two separate sources. The sources are independent and send particles one by one through their respective slits. The photons are always undistinguishable and should show an interference pattern, but because there is no way for the photon from one source to have information about its path from the other slit, there should be no interference observed. This is due to the sources being independent and not having a controlled phase relationship.
  • #1
Adiater
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If you have two similar coherent sources which are separated from each other by a barrier. Now one source sends particles one by one into one slit and the other sends particles into the other in a double slit interference experiment.

Now, the photons are always undistinguishable, so they should show an interference pattern.

But, there is no way that the photon from one source has info about its path from the other slit, so there is no way that it should ever have the info of interfernce. So, it should never show interference.
 
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  • #2
Hello Adiater, :welcome:
Adiater said:
If you have two similar coherent sources
That is pretty hard to achieve. (well, with two slits you get two coherent sources...)
Adiater said:
there is no way that the photon from one source has info about its path from the other slit, so there is no way that it should ever have the info of interfernce
'having info of' is not the issue. They will always interfere. You get a pattern if they are coherent.

Your experiment can be a setup with one source and two slits; after the slits your barrier to separate the beams and then two more slits, one on each side of the barrier. Basically these two use the center part of the central maxima of the single slit pattern as new (pretty weak) coherent sources.
Adiater said:
the photons are always undistinguishable, so they should show an interference pattern
is not a criterion
 
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  • #3
Adiater said:
But, there is no way that the photon from one source has info about its path from the other slit
How exactly do you make the sources coherent without some information transfer between the devices?
 
  • #4
Derek P said:
They only need to be self-coherent, they don't have to be phase-locked together. As long as the exposure time is shorter than the coherence time an interference pattern will be recorded - the uncontrolled phase difference between the sources just introduces a random lateral shift to the pattern.
Many random lateral shifts to the pattern summed give a uniform distribution (or, to be more precise, the sum of two double-slit patterns).
 
  • #5
mfb said:
Many random lateral shifts to the pattern summed give a uniform distribution (or, to be more precise, the sum of two double-slit patterns).
I don't think so. I think you must be overlooking the first part of my statement: "As long as the exposure time is shorter than the coherence time..." The short exposure means the pattern doesn't shift too much while you sample it.
 
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  • #6
You get a single pattern with random positions for the interference fringes each time you run the experiment. If you assume a uniform distribution for the shift you get a uniform expectation value for photon detections. There will be some correlation between the detections, sure, but that is a different statement.
 
  • #7
mfb said:
How exactly do you make the sources coherent without some information transfer between the devices?

I might be mistaken, but say you have two independent sources with same color and may be polarization and the same phase even then they should be coherent.
 
  • #8
Derek P said:
But there is still a humongous conceptual problem for the OP. How can a single photon come from two physically separated lasers?
What I meant was that a beam of photons coming out of the sources.
 
  • #9
Edit: When I posted the question, I was thinking more on the line's of Feyman's theory that each photon simultaneously travels through infinite possible paths and thus knows the places where it is not supposed to land. This is why we see double slit interference even if we try sending one photon at a time (in theory, but we could always assume the particles are electrons which can be sent one at a time). Now, if we find a way (the barrier or maybe a box surrounding the second source and the second slit) such that there is no way for particle from one slit to know the info about the paths coming from the other slit, and thus it should never show an interference pattern.

So, @mfb are you suggesting that there would be no interference pattern observed?
 
  • #10
Adiater said:
and the same phase
If you require them to have the same phase they are not independent.
 
  • #11
Adiater said:
If you have two similar coherent sources which are separated from each other by a barrier. Now one source sends particles one by one into one slit and the other sends particles into the other in a double slit interference experiment.

Now, the photons are always undistinguishable, so they should show an interference pattern.

But, there is no way that the photon from one source has info about its path from the other slit, so there is no way that it should ever have the info of interfernce. So, it should never show interference.
The two sources are independent so there will be no visible interference. Let me explain it mathematically.

When you send one photon through two slits (slit A and slit B), the wave function is
$$\psi({\bf x_1})=\psi_A({\bf x_1})+\psi_B({\bf x_1})$$
If you calculate ##\psi^*({\bf x_1})\psi({\bf x_1})## you find the interference terms.

When you send one photon through slit A and the other independent photon through slit B, you actually know which photon travels through which slit, so the wave function is
$$\psi({\bf x_1,x_2})=\psi_A({\bf x_1})\psi_B({\bf x_2})$$
so there is no interference.

Now you might argue that photons are indistinguishable, so the last expression should be symmetrized with respect to ##{\bf x_1}\leftrightarrow{\bf x_2}##. In principle that's true, but then one should really symmetrize the full wave function which includes not only the photons but also their sources. And then one should trace out the sources, to find the density matrix of the photons. When one does all that, one arrives at an expression equivalent to the last expression above.
 
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  • #13
Demystifier said:
Now you might argue that photons are indistinguishable, so the last expression should be symmetrized with respect to ##{\bf x_1}\leftrightarrow{\bf x_2}##. In principle that's true, but then one should really symmetrize the full wave function which includes not only the photons but also their sources. And then one should trace out the sources, to find the density matrix of the photons. When one does all that, one arrives at an expression equivalent to the last expression above.

I think I tend to disagree with the wording (but probably not the content). The case of distinguishable photons is clear. Fields of - for example - different polarization do not interfere and that is it. Two different independent light sources emitting into the same mode of the light field are more complicated, though. At any instant, the joint intensity distribution arising due to the two fields will necessarily contain interference terms that depend on the relative phase of these two fields. However, as this relative phase is not stable, the interference pattern will vary randomly in time. The common experimental situation is that integration times are longer than the timescale of phase randomization so just the ensemble average over all relative phases is measured, which indeed contains no interference terms anymore. However, if one keeps track of the relative phase, one can still keep the information about the interference patterns. This is what happens "naturally" in two-photon interference, where you can indeed see interference effects between very different and distinguishable light sources. Personally, I liked this demonstration of interference between a laser light field and spontaneous emission from a quantum dot very much:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1006.0820

That is from "Interference of dissimilar photon sources" by A.J. Bennett et al., Nature Physics 5, 715 (2009).
 
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1. What is double-slit interference with separate sources?

Double-slit interference with separate sources is an experiment in which two separate light sources are used to create interference patterns on a screen. This is done by passing light through two parallel slits and observing the resulting interference pattern on a screen placed behind the slits. It is a key experiment in the study of wave properties of light.

2. How does double-slit interference with separate sources occur?

Double-slit interference with separate sources occurs due to the superposition of two coherent light waves from the two separate sources. This results in constructive and destructive interference patterns on the screen, creating a series of bright and dark fringes.

3. What are the factors that affect the interference pattern in double-slit interference with separate sources?

The interference pattern in double-slit interference with separate sources is affected by several factors, including the distance between the two slits, the distance between the slits and the screen, the wavelength of the light, and the intensity of the light sources.

4. What is the significance of double-slit interference with separate sources?

Double-slit interference with separate sources is significant because it provides evidence for the wave nature of light. It also demonstrates the principle of superposition, where two waves can combine to create a new wave with a different amplitude and direction.

5. How is the double-slit interference with separate sources experiment used in real-world applications?

The double-slit interference with separate sources experiment has several real-world applications, including in the study of quantum mechanics, the development of optical devices such as diffraction gratings and holograms, and in the field of optics and photonics research.

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