2005 36th Meeting of the Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
Tuesday–Saturday, May 17–21, 2005;
Lincoln, Nebraska
Session B1: Matter Optics and Atom Chips
10:30 AM–12:54 PM,
Wednesday, May 18, 2005
Burnham Yates Conference Center
Room: Ballroom I
Chair: Herman Batelaan, University of Nebraska
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.DAMOP.B1.3
Abstract: B1.00003 : Biprism interferometry with electrons and ions, a valuable tool to study the fundamentals of quantum mechanics and quantum statistics
11:42 AM–12:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Franz Hasselbach
(Institut f\"{u}r Angewandte Physik der Universit\"{a}t T\"{u}bingen)
Our miniaturized electron biprism interferometer $[1]$ proved to
be many orders of magnitude less sensitive to mechanical and
electromagnetic disturbances than conventional interferometers
(modified electron microscopes). Experiments so far inconceivable
with electron waves, e.g., to rotate an electron interferometer
on a turntable and to prove the Sagnac phase shift $[2,3]$ or to
realize biprism interferences with He-ions $[4]$ with wavelengths
as small as 0.3 pm became reality. A crossed-field analyzer (Wien
filter) in the beam path of our electron interferometer allows to
introduce electric and magnetic Aharonov-Bohm phase differences
and transit time differences between the interfering wave packets
$[5]$. For wave packet shifts introduced by the Wien filter which
exceed the coherence length, which-path information is available
in principle, leading to vanishing fringe contrast. Since
which-path information is not read out in this experiment, fringe
contrast can be restored by compensating the longitudinal shift
in a second shifting device. Only recently we succeeded to
demonstrate that electrons arrive at two coherently illuminated
detectors `antibunched' $[6]$, i.e., according to the demands of
Fermi statistics. At present, our intertest is focused on
decoherence. Coherently split electron waves propagate over a
resistive plate. Which-path information of the electrons
decreases with increasing height of flight. In turn the contrast
of the fringes increases $[7,8]$.\\
$[1]$ F. Hasselbach, Z. Phys. B -- Condensed Matter
{\bf{71}}(1988), 443-449.\\
$[2]$ F. Hasselbach, M. Nicklaus, Phys. Rev. A {\bf{48}}(1993),
143-151.\\
$[3]$ R. Neutze, F. Hasselbach, Phys. Rev. A {\bf{58}}(1998),
557-565.\\
$[4]$ F. Hasselbach, U. Maier, in {\it{Quantum Coherence and
Decoherence: Proc. ISQM-Tokyo`98}} p. 299-302, eds. Y.Y. Ono and
K. Fujikawa, Amsterdam, Elsevier, 1999.\\
$[5]$ M. Nicklaus, F. Hasselbach, Phys. Rev. A {\bf{48}}(1993),
152-160.\\
$[6]$ Harald Kiesel, Andreas Renz \& F. Hasselbach, Nature
{\bf{418}}(2002), 392-394.\\
$[7]$ H.D. Zeh, Found. Phys. {\bf{1}}(1970), 69-76.\\
$[8]$ J.R. Anglin, J.P. Paz, W.H. Zurek, Phys. Rev. A
{\bf{55}}(1997), 4041-4053.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.DAMOP.B1.3