Entangled Photon Pairs and Young’s Experiment

Bohm’s variation of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen thought experiment may be used to reveal the path a photon travels in Young’s experiment without destroying the observed interference pattern. Photons emitted by a light-source with zero spin are incident on a screen with two narrow slits separated by a small distance, with antiparallel polarized photonic spin filters placed in front of both slits. It follows that the slit through which an incident photon passed to form an interference pattern can be determined by performing an intermediate delayed choice measurement. This experimental probe is ideal for penetrating the shroud of mystery surrounding the wave-particle duality exhibited by quantum phenomena.

mately helped to shape the fundamental building blocks of quantum mechanics. Thus, in this paper we propose a novel thought experiment that reveals the path that photons take in Young's double-slit apparatus without destroying the observed interference pattern. With the aid of advanced photonic devices such as polarized photonic spin (PPS) filters [7] and a spin photodetector [8], our analysis shows that this experiment can provide empirical proof that the photon passes through one slit or the other and not through both slits simultaneously, without causing the observed interference pattern to vanish. This experimental probe is ideal for penetrating the shroud of mystery surrounding the wave-particle duality exhibited by quantum phenomena.

EPR-Bohm thought Experiment with Photon Pairs
Albert Einstein, Boris Podolsky, and Nathan Rosen meant to look for an experiment that could measure, indirectly but simultaneously, two mutually exclusive quantities like position and momentum. Such results would contravene the predictions of quantum mechanics, which allows the measurement of only one such quantity at any other time; that is why this particular thought experiment has come to be known as the EPR paradox [9].
In 1952 David Bohm showed that the paradox could be set up not only with continuously varying quantities like position and momentum, but also with discrete quantities like spin. Thus, let us consider the EPR-Bohm thought experiment [10] for photon pairs. Suppose a light source S with zero spin that is at rest spontaneously emits two photons simultaneously. In accordance with the conservation of momentum, the two photons diverge from S in opposite directions, which I have labeled A and B in Figure 1 below. Since the initial total spin angular momentum of the system is zero and must be conserved, then the final total spin angular momentum of the system is zero, as well.
According to quantum mechanics, we can arrange our light source so that each emitted photon pair occupies a quantum state known as a singlet or spin singlet state. The photons of a photon pair are thus said to be entangled (or correlated). This can be viewed as a quantum superposition of two states, which we shall call state R and state L , for photons with right and left-handed spin, respectively. This is a state of entangled spin angular momentum. Because circular polarization is assigned relative to the direction of propagation, the singlet state of the two counter-propagating photons denoted A γ and B γ , respectively includes two right-handed , R R and two left-handed , L L photons, which where , R R is the state vector for state I and , L L is the state vector for state II. In general, the singlet state is symmetric in the circular polarization basis and exhibits perfectly correlated spin components when locally measured along any axis.
One finds that upon measuring the spin of A

Young's Experiment for Single Photons
The acceptance of the wave character of light was firmly established in 1801, when the English physicist and physician Thomas Young demonstrated optical interference with his now-classic two-slit interference experiment. In Young's experiment, sunlight was passed through a pinhole on a board. The emerging beam fell upon two pin holes, separated by a few millimeters, on a second board. The light emanating from the two pinholes then fell on a screen where a pattern of bright and dark spots was observed [6]. This pattern, called fringes, can only be explained through interference, as a wave phenomenon. Today, aware of the physics, we generally replace the pinholes with narrow slits that let through much more light. Over one hundred years later in 1909, Sir Geoffrey Ingram Taylor, while an undergraduate, set up Young's experiment and gradually reduced the intensity of the incident light beam to such an extent that there would only be one quantum of energy (a single photon) in the apparatus at any given instant [12]. The resulting interference pattern was recorded using a photographic plate with a very long exposure time. To his disappointment, he found no noticeable change in the pattern, even at the lowest intensities.
At this point one may naturally ask, doesn't it take two waves to interfere? Can a single photon split in half, pass through both slits simultaneously, and then interfere with itself? Quantum mechanics unambiguously says yes. As Paul Dirac, one of the pioneers of relativistic quantum field theory, put it: "Each photon interferes only with itself. Interference between different photons never occurs" [13]. The proof that quantum mechanics offers for this absurd proposition is known as the principle of quantum superposition [14]; and has no classical analogue. Quantum superposition is supposedly responsible for all the miraculous magic that quantum systems are capable of, which have been completely verified by a myriad of experiments and modern technologies.
We must not however get carried away and conclude from the interference pattern that photon waves are classical waves, because photons do arrive at the photographic plate in a definite way-one localized flash per photon. It is the totality of spots made by many photons that forms the wave interference phenomena. Analogous to electron waves, photon waves are probability (or relativistic de Broglie) waves [15]. Hence, we say that the probability of a photon arriving at the light areas on the observation screen is high while the probability of a photon arriving at the dark areas is low. Accordingly, the corresponding state of the photons exiting the two slits is represented by the following expression: where 1 2 ψ and 2 2 ψ represent the (normalized) probability amplitudes for a photon to pass through either slit 1 or slit 2, respectively.

Young's Experiment with Parallel PPS Filters
Suppose there exists a device which allows one to filter out photons with a desired spin state from incident light with mixed spin states without disturbing the quantum coherence [16] of their wave functions. We will call such a device a polarized photonic spin (PPS) filter. An ideal PPS filter allows left-handed photons to pass through it without divergence in one direction and right-handed photons to pass through it without divergence in the opposite direction.
Let us imagine that a spin-zero source decays and emits entangled photon pairs [17] with one photon of the entangled pair traveling in direction A and the other traveling in direction B (see Figure 2 for reference). The photons traveling γ exiting the two-slit screen has the perspicuous form where , L L are undeflected left-handed entangled photon states and , R R ′ ′ are deflected right-handed entangled photon states. This expression combines the various elements of the system (i.e., double-slit screen, PPS filters, and entangled incident photons) in a non-separable [18] manner which explains the observed correlations.
The probability density γ arriving at a point = r R on the observation screen is given by the squared modulus of ( ) where the cross-terms ψ ψ are responsible for the well-known interference phenomena of Young's double-slit experiment. This result, of course, agrees with our expectations that the two-slit interference apparatus with parallel PPS filters should behave similar to that without filters and produce an interference pattern on the observation screen. This result also ensures that the PPS filters are operating properly and not causing the incident photons to experience any large uncontrollable phase factors and or scattering events before passing through the screen.

Observing Position without Destroying Interference
Now we consider the situation where the PPS filters positioned in front of the slits are oriented so that left-handed photons can pass through hole 1 without divergence and right-handed photons can pass through hole 2 without divergence. The incident photons that pass through the antiparallel PPS filters are transmitted without disturbing the coherent superposition of For this set up, the state of the photons B γ exiting the double-slit screen is given by Because the PPS filters do not alter the polarization state of the incident photons in any way, the superposition of the two slits remains intact. Hence, as expressed by Equation (5) From this it follows that the probability density  (7) and the cross-terms 1 2 ψ ψ and In the setup shown in Figure 3 the spin of the non-incident photons is measured by a spin photodetector. Measurement of the spin orientation of A γ before B γ arrives at the observation screen or after the following entangled photon enters the apparatus [19], is observed to collapse the coherent superposi- For example, assume an IDC measurement of A γ gives a right-handed outcome, then it immediately follows from the conservation of total spin angular momentum, that B γ had the same spin when it passed through the screen Σ.
Since the PPS filters, located in front of the two narrow slits, prevents photons with right-handed spin from arriving at the observation screen through slit 1 is incident on a screen Σ with two narrow slits covered by two antiparallel PPS filters. An IDC measurement of A γ by a spin photodetector leaves the interference pattern, on the observation screen σ, undisturbed. and photons with left-handed spin from arriving at the observation screen through slit 2, then we can logically deduce with a high degree of confidence that B γ must have passed through slit 2 to reach the observation screen σ.

Conclusions
We have thus presented a compelling thought experiment that allows us to observe the position of a photon in Young's two-slit apparatus without causing the interference pattern to vanish. In general, the advanced optical hardware and measurement techniques presented in this paper are considered to make this thought experiment notably different than similar experiments [19] [20] of its kind.
In any event, the implications of this thought experiment are immense. On the one hand, observation of the position of a particle while behaving like a wave would fundamentally alter our physical understanding of the wave-particle duality of nature and perhaps provide new insight into the inner workings of quantum physics as well. While on the other hand, if the antiparallel PPS filters do not destroy the interference pattern and the position of the photon still eludes us, then this result would strongly suggest that the information of which slit the photon passed through to produce an interference pattern is causally (temporally) inaccessible.

Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.