arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:0811.2068 [quant-ph]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Testing Born's Rule in Quantum Mechanics with a Triple Slit Experiment

Urbasi Sinha, Christophe Couteau, Zachari Medendorp, Immo Söllner, Raymond Laflamme, Rafael Sorkin, Gregor Weihs

Published 2008-11-13Version 1

In Mod. Phys. Lett. A 9, 3119 (1994), one of us (R.D.S) investigated a formulation of quantum mechanics as a generalized measure theory. Quantum mechanics computes probabilities from the absolute squares of complex amplitudes, and the resulting interference violates the (Kolmogorov) sum rule expressing the additivity of probabilities of mutually exclusive events. However, there is a higher order sum rule that quantum mechanics does obey, involving the probabilities of three mutually exclusive possibilities. We could imagine a yet more general theory by assuming that it violates the next higher sum rule. In this paper, we report results from an ongoing experiment that sets out to test the validity of this second sum rule by measuring the interference patterns produced by three slits and all the possible combinations of those slits being open or closed. We use attenuated laser light combined with single photon counting to confirm the particle character of the measured light.

Comments: Submitted to the proceedings of Foundations of Probability and Physics-5, Vaxjo, Sweden, August 2008. 8 pages, 8 figures
Categories: quant-ph
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1306.2993 [quant-ph] (Published 2013-06-12, updated 2014-03-05)
Derivation of quantum mechanics from a single fundamental modification of the relations between physical properties
arXiv:quant-ph/9811074 (Published 1998-11-26)
Measurement in Quantum Mechanics: From Probabilities to Objective Events
arXiv:quant-ph/9803025 (Published 1998-03-11, updated 1998-06-18)
The Measurement Problem and the Reduction Postulate of Quantum Mechanics