| Literature DB >> 31997829 |
Yakir Aharonov1,2,3, Eliahu Cohen4,3, Avshalom C Elitzur2,3, Lee Smolin5.
Abstract
A Gedanken experiment is presented where an excited and a ground-state atom are positioned such that, within the former's half-life time, they exchange a photon with 50% probability. A measurement of their energy state will therefore indicate in 50% of the cases that no photon was exchanged. Yet other measurements would reveal that, by the mere possibility of exchange, the two atoms have become entangled. Consequently, the "no exchange" result, apparently precluding entanglement, is non-locally established between the atoms by this very entanglement. This quantum-mechanical version of the ancient Liar Paradox can be realized with already existing transmission schemes, with the addition of Bell's theorem applied to the no-exchange cases. Under appropriate probabilities, the initially-excited atom, still excited, can be entangled with additional atoms time and again, or alternatively, exert multipartite nonlocal correlations in an interaction free manner. When densely repeated several times, this result also gives rise to the Quantum Zeno effect, again exerted between distant atoms without photon exchange. We discuss these experiments as variants of interaction-free-measurement, now generalized for both spatial and temporal uncertainties. We next employ weak measurements for elucidating the paradox. Interpretational issues are discussed in the conclusion, and a resolution is offered within the Two-State Vector Formalism and its new Heisenberg framework.Entities:
Keywords: Entanglement; Interaction free measurement; Nonlocality; Quantum Zeno effect; Weak measurements
Year: 2017 PMID: 31997829 PMCID: PMC6956877 DOI: 10.1007/s10701-017-0127-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Found Phys ISSN: 0015-9018 Impact factor: 1.390
Fig. 1a An excited and a ground-state atoms b turn into an entangled excited/ground state after a possible photon exchange, and then sealed in their cavities
Fig. 2Apparently, the photon’s absorption at A “kills” its wave-function’s other half going to B, yet the earlier weak measurement (denoted in gray) performed on A is weakly Bell-correlated with B, as a remnant of the earlier entanglement