Observing fermionic statistics with photons in arbitrary processes
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 18:27authored byJonathan Matthews, Konstantinos Poulios, Jasmin Meinecke, Alberto Politi, Alberto Peruzzo, Nur Ismail, Kerstin Wörhoff, Mark Thompson, Jeremy O'Brien
Quantum mechanics defines two classes of particles-bosons and fermions-whose exchange statistics fundamentally dictate quantum dynamics. Here we develop a scheme that uses entanglement to directly observe the correlated detection statistics of any number of fermions in any physical process. This approach relies on sending each of the entangled particles through identical copies of the process and by controlling a single phase parameter in the entangled state, the correlated detection statistics can be continuously tuned between bosonic and fermionic statistics. We implement this scheme via two entangled photons shared across the polarisation modes of a single photonic chip to directly mimic the fermion, boson and intermediate behaviour of two-particles undergoing a continuous time quantum walk. The ability to simulate fermions with photons is likely to have applications for verifying boson scattering and for observing particle correlations in analogue simulation using any physical platform that can prepare the entangled state prescribed here.
History
Journal
Scientific Reports
Volume
3
Number
1539
Start page
1
End page
7
Total pages
7
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Place published
United Kingdom
Language
English
Copyright
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/