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Main Authors: Dou, Jian-Peng, Lu, Feng, Tang, Hao, Shang, Xiao-Wen, Jin, Xian-Min
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.13383
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author Dou, Jian-Peng
Lu, Feng
Tang, Hao
Shang, Xiao-Wen
Jin, Xian-Min
author_facet Dou, Jian-Peng
Lu, Feng
Tang, Hao
Shang, Xiao-Wen
Jin, Xian-Min
contents In quantum mechanics, a long-standing question remains: How does a single photon traverse double slits? One intuitive picture suggests that the photon passes through only one slit, while its wavefunction splits into an ``empty" wave and a ``full" wave. However, the reality of this empty wave is yet to be verified. Here, we present a novel experimental configuration that combines quantum memory and weak measurement to investigate the nature of the empty wave. A single atomic excitation is probabilistically split between free space and a quantum memory, analogous to the two paths in a double-slit experiment. The quantum memory serves as a path detector, where single-photon Raman scattering is enhanced due to the presence of a stored spin wave, without collapsing the quantum state. This enhancement is recorded as classical information, and the spin wave stored in the quantum memory is retrieved twice, with an interference visibility of 79%. Unlike conventional weak measurement schemes, where weak values are detected during post-selection, our approach converts the weak value into classical information before interference takes place. Our results demonstrate the potential of quantum memory as a measurement device that preserves coherence while extracting partial information, offering new insights into quantum measurement.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_13383
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Test of Empty Wave via Quantum Memory in a Weak Measurement Scheme
Dou, Jian-Peng
Lu, Feng
Tang, Hao
Shang, Xiao-Wen
Jin, Xian-Min
Quantum Physics
In quantum mechanics, a long-standing question remains: How does a single photon traverse double slits? One intuitive picture suggests that the photon passes through only one slit, while its wavefunction splits into an ``empty" wave and a ``full" wave. However, the reality of this empty wave is yet to be verified. Here, we present a novel experimental configuration that combines quantum memory and weak measurement to investigate the nature of the empty wave. A single atomic excitation is probabilistically split between free space and a quantum memory, analogous to the two paths in a double-slit experiment. The quantum memory serves as a path detector, where single-photon Raman scattering is enhanced due to the presence of a stored spin wave, without collapsing the quantum state. This enhancement is recorded as classical information, and the spin wave stored in the quantum memory is retrieved twice, with an interference visibility of 79%. Unlike conventional weak measurement schemes, where weak values are detected during post-selection, our approach converts the weak value into classical information before interference takes place. Our results demonstrate the potential of quantum memory as a measurement device that preserves coherence while extracting partial information, offering new insights into quantum measurement.
title A Test of Empty Wave via Quantum Memory in a Weak Measurement Scheme
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.13383