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The
World's Smallest Double Slit Experiment: Breaking up the Hydrogen
Molecule
November 08, 2007
The
traditional double slit experiment uses a single light
source and two slits in an opaque screen (top). Compare to a
double slit experiment using double photoionization of the
hydrogen molecule (lower panels): when an x-ray photon
ejects both the molecule's electrons, the two proton nuclei
act as slits, causing scattered electron waves to produce
interference patterns. The waveform of the fast electron is
shown at bottom.
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Credit:
Berkeley Lab
The big world of classical
physics mostly seems sensible: waves are waves and particles are
particles, and the moon rises whether anyone watches or not. The
tiny quantum world is different: particles are
waves (and vice versa), and quantum systems remain in a state of
multiple possibilities until they are measured — which
amounts to an intrusion by an observer from the big world —
and forced to choose: the exact position or momentum of an
electron, say.
On what scale do the quantum
world and the classical world begin to cross into each other? How
big does an "observer" have to be? It's a long-argued
question of fundamental scientific interest and practical
importance as well, with significant implications for attempts to
build solid-state quantum computers.
Researchers at the Department
of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and their
collaborators at the University of Frankfurt, Germany; Kansas
State University; and Auburn University have now established that
quantum particles start behaving in a classical way on a scale as
small as a single hydrogen molecule. They reached this conclusion
after performing what they call the world's simplest — and
certainly its smallest — double slit experiment, using as
their two "slits" the two proton nuclei of a hydrogen
molecule, only 1.4 atomic units apart (a few ten-billionths of a
meter). Their results appear in the November 9, 2007 issue of
Science.
The
double slit experiment
"One of the most powerful
ways to explore the quantum world is the double slit experiment,"
says Ali Belkacem of Berkeley Lab's Chemical Sciences Division,
one of the research leaders. In its familiar form, the double
slit experiment uses a single light source shining through two
slits, side by side in an opaque screen; the light that passes
through falls on a screen.
If either of the two slits is
closed, the light going through the other slit forms a bright bar
on the screen, striking the screen like a stream of BBs or
Ping-Pong balls or other solid particles. But if both slits are
open, the beams overlap to form interference fringes, just as
waves in water do, with bright bands where the wavecrests
reinforce one another and dark bands where they cancel.
So is light particles or waves?
The ambiguous results of early double slit experiments (the first
on record was in 1801) were not resolved until well into the 20th
century, when it became clear from both experiment and the theory
of quantum mechanics that light is both waves and particles —
moreover, that particles, including electrons, also have a wave
nature.
"It's the wave nature of
electrons that allows them to act in a correlated way in a
hydrogen molecule," says Thorsten Weber of the Chemical
Sciences Division, another of the experiment's leading
researchers. "When two particles are part of the same
quantum system, their interactions are not restricted to
electromagnetism, for example, or gravity. They also possess
quantum coherence — they share information about their
states nonlocally, even when separated by arbitrary distances."
Correlation between its two
electrons is actually what makes double photoionization possible
with a hydrogen molecule. Photoionization means that an energetic
photon, in this case an x-ray, knocks an electron out of an atom
or molecule, leaving the system with net charge (ionized); in
double photoionization a single photon triggers the emission of
two electrons.
"The photon hits only one
electron, but because they are correlated, because they cohere in
the quantum sense, the electron that's hit flies off in one
direction with a certain momentum, and the other electron also
flies off at a specific angle to it with a different
momentum," Weber explains.
The experimental set-up used by
Belkacem and Weber and their colleagues, being movable, was
employed on both beamlines 4.0 and 11.0 of Berkeley Lab's
Advanced Light Source (ALS). In the apparatus a stream of
hydrogen gas is sent through an interaction region, where some of
the molecules are struck by an x-ray beam from the ALS. When the
two negatively charged electrons are knocked out of a molecule,
the two positively charged protons (the nuclei of the hydrogen
atoms) blow themselves apart by mutual repulsion. An electric
field in the experiment's interaction region separates the
positively and negatively charged particles, sending the protons
to one detector and the electrons to a detector in the opposite
direction.
"It's what's called a
kinematically complete experiment," Belkacem says, "one
in which every particle is accounted for. We can determine the
momentum of all the particles, the initial orientation and
distance between the protons, and the momentum of the electrons."
What
the simplest double slit experiment reveals
To
perform the experiment, a supersonic jet of hydrogen (source
at bottom) is ionized by a beam of x-rays from the Advanced
Light Source (not shown). The doubly photoionized molecule
blows apart, and the protons (red) strike the detector at
left while the electrons (blue), trapped in a magnetic
field, strike the detector at right. The energy of all the
particles and the original orientation of the molecule can
be determined from the measured results.
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Credit:
Berkeley Lab
"At the high photon
energies we used for photoionization, most of the time we
observed one fast electron and one slow electron," says
Weber. "What we were interested in was the interference
patterns."
Considered as particles, the
electrons fly off at an angle to one another that depends on
their energy and how they scatter from the two hydrogen nuclei
(the "double slit"). Considered as waves, an electron
makes an interference pattern that can be seen by calculating the
probability that the electron will be found at a given position
relative to the orientation of the two nuclei.
The wave nature of the electron
means that in a double slit experiment even a single electron is
capable of interfering with itself. Double slit experiments with
photoionized hydrogen molecules at first showed only the
self-interference patterns of the fast electrons, their waves
bouncing off both protons, with little action from the slow
electrons.
"From these patterns, it
might look like the slow electron is not important, that double
photoionization is pretty unspectacular," says Weber. The
fast electrons' energies were 185 to 190 eV (electron volts),
while the slow electrons had energies of 5 eV or less. But what
happens if the slow electron is given just a bit more energy, say
somewhere between 5 and 25 eV? As Weber puts it, "What
if we make the slow electron a little more active? What if we
turn it into an 'observer?'"
As long as both electrons are
isolated from their surroundings, quantum coherence prevails, as
revealed by the fast electron's wavelike interference pattern.
But this interference pattern disappears when the slow electron
is made into an observer of the fast one, a stand-in for the
larger environment: the quantum system of the fast electron now
interacts with the wider world (e.g., its next neighboring
particle, the slow electron) and begins to decohere. The system
has entered the realm of classical physics.
Not completely, however. And
here is what Belkacem calls "the meat of the experiment":
"Even when the interference pattern has disappeared, we can
see that coherence is still there, hidden in the entanglement
between the two electrons."
Although one electron has
become entangled with its environment, the two electrons are
still entangled with each other in a way that allows interference
between them to be reconstructed, simply by graphing their
correlated momenta from the angles at which the electrons were
ejected. Two waveforms appear in the graph, either of which can
be projected to show an interference pattern. But the two
waveforms are out of phase with each other: viewed
simultaneously, interference vanishes.
If the two-electron system is
split into its subsytems and one (the "observer") is
thought of as the environment of the other, it becomes evident
that classical properties such as loss of coherence can emerge
even when only four particles (two electrons, two protons) are
involved. Yet because the two electron subsystems are entangled
in a tractable way, their quantum coherence can be reconstructed.
What Weber calls "the which-way information exchanged
between the particles" persists.
Says Belkacem, "For
researchers who are trying to build solid-state quantum computers
this is both good news and bad news. The bad news is that
decoherence and loss of information occur on the very tiny scale
of a single hydrogen molecule. The good news is that,
theoretically, the information isn't necessarily lost — or
at least not completely."
Source:
Berkeley Lab

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