How does light move?: Determining the flow of light without destroying interference
Apstrakt
Young's two-slit experiment constitutes the paradigm of quantum complementarity. According to the complementarity principle, complementary aspects of quantum systems cannot be measured at the same time by the same experiment. This has been a long debate in quantum mechanics since its inception. But is this a true constraint? In 2011, an astounding realization of this experiment showed that perhaps this is not the case, and the boundaries to our understanding of the quantum world are still far away.
Izvor:
Europhysics News, 2013, 44, 6, 33-36Finansiranje / projekti:
- Istraživanje u oblasti zamora , mehanike loma i pouzdanosti rudarskih i energetskih konstrukcija (RS-14009)
Kolekcije
Institucija/grupa
GraFarTY - JOUR AU - Davidović, Milena AU - Sanz, Angel S. PY - 2013 UR - https://grafar.grf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/553 AB - Young's two-slit experiment constitutes the paradigm of quantum complementarity. According to the complementarity principle, complementary aspects of quantum systems cannot be measured at the same time by the same experiment. This has been a long debate in quantum mechanics since its inception. But is this a true constraint? In 2011, an astounding realization of this experiment showed that perhaps this is not the case, and the boundaries to our understanding of the quantum world are still far away. T2 - Europhysics News T1 - How does light move?: Determining the flow of light without destroying interference EP - 36 IS - 6 SP - 33 VL - 44 DO - 10.1051/epn/2013604 ER -
@article{ author = "Davidović, Milena and Sanz, Angel S.", year = "2013", abstract = "Young's two-slit experiment constitutes the paradigm of quantum complementarity. According to the complementarity principle, complementary aspects of quantum systems cannot be measured at the same time by the same experiment. This has been a long debate in quantum mechanics since its inception. But is this a true constraint? In 2011, an astounding realization of this experiment showed that perhaps this is not the case, and the boundaries to our understanding of the quantum world are still far away.", journal = "Europhysics News", title = "How does light move?: Determining the flow of light without destroying interference", pages = "36-33", number = "6", volume = "44", doi = "10.1051/epn/2013604" }
Davidović, M.,& Sanz, A. S.. (2013). How does light move?: Determining the flow of light without destroying interference. in Europhysics News, 44(6), 33-36. https://doi.org/10.1051/epn/2013604
Davidović M, Sanz AS. How does light move?: Determining the flow of light without destroying interference. in Europhysics News. 2013;44(6):33-36. doi:10.1051/epn/2013604 .
Davidović, Milena, Sanz, Angel S., "How does light move?: Determining the flow of light without destroying interference" in Europhysics News, 44, no. 6 (2013):33-36, https://doi.org/10.1051/epn/2013604 . .