LinkWhich came first, the chicken or the egg? According to a report in Physical Review Letters, a team of physicists from the University of Queensland and Grenoble’s Institut NÉEL have come up with lab evidence concerning the direction of causality that would have left Aristotle speechless. Dr Jacqui Romero from the ARC Centre for Engineered Quantum Systems explains that quantum physics offers a strange alternative to clear cut causes and effects: “The weirdness of quantum mechanics means that events can happen without a set order… This is called ‘indefinite causal order’ and it isn’t something that we can observe in our everyday life.” To observe this effect in the lab, the scientists devised a photonic quantum switch. “By measuring the polarisation of the photons at the output of the quantum switch, we were able to show the order of transformations on the shape of light was not set.” In other words, the transformation events were not taking place in a fixed order. Dr Fabio Costa sees much potential in the findings: “This is just a first proof of principle, but on a larger scale indefinite causal order can have real practical applications, like making computers more efficient or improving communication.”
LinkQuantum mechanics allows events to happen with no definite causal order: this can be verified by measuring a causal witness, in the same way that an entanglement witness verifies entanglement. Here, we realize a photonic quantum switch, where two operations Aˆ and Bˆ act in a quantum superposition of their two possible orders. The operations are on the transverse spatial mode of the photons; polarization coherently controls their order. Our implementation ensures that the operations cannot be distinguished by spatial or temporal position—further it allows qudit encoding in the target. We confirm our quantum switch has no definite causal order by constructing a causal witness and measuring its value to be 18 standard deviations beyond the definite-order bound.
Well, why not? Why shouldn't a cause happen after the event? — Banno
The experimenters send a photon through an interferometer where one path has event A followed by event B and the other path has event B followed by event A. The paths are recombined and measurements of the photon match the predictions of quantum mechanics rather than classical mechanics (where the photon travels only one of the paths). — Andrew M
Is the indefinite history only a product of thinking of a photon as a particle instead of a wave? — Marchesk
No. The experiment can also be considered at a macro scale using Schrodinger's cat as Banno suggests above. — Andrew M
Wouldn't the cat be doing the equivalent of taking a measurement, creating a definite result? — Marchesk
I never understood why the cat could be in a superposition, but the scientists conducting the experiments were not. — Marchesk
Strictly, the experiment shows that we cannot know if event A caused event B, or B caused A. The meaning of "cause" breaks down here. — Banno
Strictly, the experiment shows that we cannot know if event A caused event B, or B caused A. The meaning of "cause" breaks down here. — Banno
Well, why not? Why shouldn't a cause happen after the event?
Well, why not? Why shouldn't a cause happen after the event? — Banno
We arrived at causality by virtue of witnessing it happen... over and over and over again... — creativesoul
But with quantum mechanics, what is witnessed... — apokrisis
Well, why not? Why shouldn't a cause happen after the event? — Banno
You might have some kind of superpower. I would check into. You could be investing successfully or winning the lottery before you use your money! — Marchesk
But with quantum mechanics, what is witnessed is violations of this simple classical model of causality "over and over and over again".
Why did the neutron decay? If its propensity to decay is steadfastly random, any moment being as good as another, then how could you assign a cause to that effect? It is a spontaneous event and so causeless in any specific triggering sense. — apokrisis
In Fig. 3, in the absence of a sample, both the sample beam SB and the reference beam RB will arrive in phase at detector 1, yielding constructive interference. ... At detector 2, in the absence of a sample, the sample beam and reference beam will arrive with a phase difference of half a wavelength, yielding complete destructive interference. ... Therefore, when there is no sample, only detector 1 receives light." — Mach–Zehnder interferometer
Unpredictability doesn't imply a violation of causality. Without knowledge or control of the underlying physical causes coin flips are also unpredictable. — Andrew M
The Schrodinger equation is deterministic and so, in principle, can predict when a particular neutron will decay. — Andrew M
Well, why not? Why shouldn't a cause happen after the event? — Banno
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