English

Characterization of Two-Particle Interference by Complementarity

Quantum Physics 2022-07-21 v2

Abstract

Bohr's Complementarity Principle is quantitatively formulated in terms of the distinguishability of various paths a quanton can take, and the measure of the interference it produces. This phenomenon results from the interference of single-quanton amplitudes for various paths. The distinguishability of paths puts a bound on the sharpness of the interference the quanton can produce. However there exist other kinds of quantum phenomena where interference of two-particle amplitudes results in a two-particle interference, if the particles are indistinguishable. The Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) effect and the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) effect are two well known examples. However, two-particle interference is not as easy to define as its single particle counterpart, and the realization that it involves interference of two-particle amplitudes, came much later. In this work, a duality relation, between the particle distinguishability and the visibility of two-particle interference, is derived. The distinguishability of the two particles, arising from some internal degree of freedom, puts a bound on the sharpness of the two-particle interference they can produce, in a HOM or HBT kind of experiment. It is argued that the existence of this kind of complementarity can be used to characterize two-particle interference, which in turn leads one to the conclusion that the HOM and the HBT effects are equivalent in essence, and may be treated as a single two-particle interference phenonmenon.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2201.04549,
  title  = {Characterization of Two-Particle Interference by Complementarity},
  author = {Neha Pathania and Tabish Qureshi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2201.04549},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Thoroughly revised and expanded, title changed. To appear in PRA

R2 v1 2026-06-24T08:47:53.711Z