黄色直播

Quantum optics graduate students Dylan Mahler (l) and Lee Rozema (r) prepare pairs of entangled photons to study the disturbance the photons experience after they are measured (photo by Dylan Mahler)

黄色直播 scientists cast doubt on the uncertainty principle

Werner Heisenberg was too pessimistic, researchers say

Researchers at the 黄色直播 have demonstrated that theoretical physicist Werner Heisenberg was too pessimistic in 1927 when formulating his famous uncertainty principle.

The Heisenberg uncertainty principle is one of the cornerstones of quantum mechanics.  In its most familiar form, it says that it is impossible to measure anything without disturbing it. For instance, any attempt to measure a particle's position must randomly change its speed.

The principle has bedeviled quantum physicists for nearly a century, until recently, when researchers at 黄色直播 demonstrated the ability to directly measure the disturbance. 

鈥淲e designed an apparatus to measure a property 鈥 the polarization 鈥 of a single photon. We then needed to measure how much that apparatus disturbed that photon,鈥 says Lee Rozema, a PhD candidate in Professor Aephraim Steinberg鈥檚 quantum optics research group at 黄色直播, and lead author of a study published this week in Physical Review of Letters.

鈥淭o do this, we would need to measure the photon before the apparatus but that measurement would also disturb the photon,鈥 Rozema says.

In order to overcome this hurdle, Rozema and his colleagues employed a technique known as weak measurement wherein the action of a measuring device is weak enough to have an imperceptible impact on what is being measured. Before each photon was sent to the measurement apparatus, the researchers measured it weakly and then measured it again afterwards, comparing the results. They found that the disturbance induced by the measurement is less than Heisenberg's precision-disturbance relation would require.

鈥淓ach shot only gave us a tiny bit of information about the disturbance, but by repeating the experiment many times we were able to get a very good idea about how much the photon was disturbed,鈥 says Rozema.

The findings build on recent challenges to Heisenberg鈥檚 principle by scientists the world over. Nagoya University physicist Masanao Ozawa suggested in 2003 that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle does not apply to measurement, but could only suggest an indirect way to confirm his predictions. A validation of the sort he proposed was carried out last year by Yuji Hasegawa's group at the Vienna University of Technology. In 2010, Griffith University scientists Austin Lund and Howard Wiseman showed that weak measurements could be used to characterize the process of measuring a quantum system. However, there were still hurdles to clear as their idea effectively required a small quantum computer, which is difficult to build.

鈥淚n the past, we have worked experimentally both on implementing weak measurements, and using a technique called 鈥榗luster state quantum computing鈥 to simplify building quantum computers.  The combination of these two ideas led to the realization that there was a way to implement Lund and Wiseman's ideas in the lab,鈥 says Rozema.

It is often assumed that Heisenberg's uncertainty principle applies to both the intrinsic uncertainty that a quantum system must possess, as well as to measurements. These results show that this is not the case and demonstrate the degree of precision that can be achieved with weak-measurement techniques.

鈥淭he results force us to adjust our view of exactly what limits quantum mechanics places on measurement,鈥 says Rozema. 鈥淭hese limits are important to fundamental quantum mechanics and also central in developing 'quantum cryptography' technology, which relies on the uncertainty principle to guarantee that any eavesdropper would be detected due to the disturbance caused by her measurements.鈥

鈥淭he quantum world is still full of uncertainty, but at least our attempts to look at it don't have to add as much uncertainty as we used to think!鈥

The findings are reported in the paper 鈥淰iolation of Heisenberg's Measurement-Disturbance Relationship by Weak Measurements鈥. The research is supported by funding from Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.

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