Physics:Quantum Mach-Zehnder interferometer: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Interferometer used to demonstrate single-particle quantum interference}} | {{Short description|Interferometer used to demonstrate single-particle quantum interference}} | ||
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|image=[[File:Quantum_Mach_Zehnder_interferometer_educational_yellow.png|430px|Mach-Zehnder interferometer: beam splitters, mirrors, phase shifts, and output detectors reveal quantum interference.]] | |image=[[File:Quantum_Mach_Zehnder_interferometer_educational_yellow.png|430px|Mach-Zehnder interferometer: beam splitters, mirrors, phase shifts, and output detectors reveal quantum interference.]] | ||
|text= | |text=The Mach-Zehnder interferometer is a Book I topic in the Quantum Collection. It is an interferometer in which a beam is split into two paths and later recombined so that phase differences appear as changes in output intensity or detection probabilities. In quantum mechanics the device can be used with single photons, atoms, or other particles, making it a clear example of path superposition and interference. It connects beam splitters, phase shifts, which-path information, complementarity, and quantum measurement. Variants are used in precision metrology, quantum optics, delayed-choice experiments, and tests of wave-particle duality. | ||
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== Overview == | == Overview == | ||
Placeholder: explain how a Mach-Zehnder interferometer splits and recombines quantum amplitudes to reveal phase-dependent interference. | Placeholder: explain how a Mach-Zehnder interferometer splits and recombines quantum amplitudes to reveal phase-dependent interference. | ||
Latest revision as of 22:58, 23 May 2026
The Mach-Zehnder interferometer is a Book I topic in the Quantum Collection. It is an interferometer in which a beam is split into two paths and later recombined so that phase differences appear as changes in output intensity or detection probabilities. In quantum mechanics the device can be used with single photons, atoms, or other particles, making it a clear example of path superposition and interference. It connects beam splitters, phase shifts, which-path information, complementarity, and quantum measurement. Variants are used in precision metrology, quantum optics, delayed-choice experiments, and tests of wave-particle duality.
Overview
Placeholder: explain how a Mach-Zehnder interferometer splits and recombines quantum amplitudes to reveal phase-dependent interference.
Key ideas
Placeholder: cover beam splitters, mirrors, path amplitudes, phase shifts, detectors, interference.
Interferometer layout
Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, experimental details, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.
Path amplitudes
Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, experimental details, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.
Phase dependence
Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, experimental details, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.
Single-photon experiments
Placeholder: develop this section with definitions, experimental details, formulas, and links to related Quantum Collection pages.
See also
Table of contents (217 articles)
Index
Full contents
References
Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Mach-Zehnder interferometer
