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Physics News Update
Number 566, November 21, 2001 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein

Hidden Objects Revealed With Quantum Holography

Second sight and remote viewing are terms used to explain charlatans' supposed psychic ability to see hidden objects in terms of pseudoscientific gibberish. Quantum holography, on the other hand, is a method firmly grounded in modern physics that permits the imaging of hidden objects with entangled photons. Of the quantum entanglement phenomena that Einstein described as "spooky action at a distance," quantum holography may be the spookiest to date.

Researchers at Boston University's Quantum Imaging Laboratory (Bahaa Saleh, 617-353-7176, besaleh@bu.edu) propose to create holographic images of objects concealed in a spherical chamber. Ideally, a small opening in the chamber wall permits light to enter, but lets no light out. The photons in a beam of light directed through the hole scatter from the enclosed object, and ultimately strike the inner wall of the chamber (see figure).

According to the scheme, the inside of chamber would be designed to detect the time when a photon hits the wall but not where it hits. Classically, there is no way to generate an image of an object with this sort of configuration. Quantum mechanically, however, it's possible to build a hologram of the hidden object provided that the photons in the illuminating beam are entangled with photons in another beam.

Each photon in an entangled pair has properties (such as momentum or polarization) that are unknown until a measurement is performed on one photon or the other. When a property of one of the photons is measured, corresponding information about its entangled mate is instantly determined.

That may seem spooky enough, but in quantum holography, things get spookier still. Holograms are typically constructed with interfering beams of light, which provides more information about a subject than simple illumination can. The additional information helps build a three dimensional image of a three dimensional object.

In quantum holography, the researchers measure the simultaneous arrivals of an illuminating photon that is sent into the chamber and a companion photon in the other entangled beam. This measurement tells the researchers about the interference of various possible paths that the single photon inside the chamber could travel. And it's the interference of the possible paths that encodes the holographic image of the hidden object. Very spooky indeed.

For the moment, quantum holography exists only on paper. But the researchers assert that there are no technological obstacles to the proposal, and they hope to begin building an experimental system soon. (Ayman F. Abouraddy, Bahaa E. A. Saleh, Alexander V. Sergienko, and Malvin C. Teich, Optics Express, 5 November 2001.)

Puzzling Neutrino Results at Fermilab

Particle physics is slow, expensive, and labor-intensive. That's because studying the most fundamental forces and bits of matter in the universe often means boosting things to very close to the speed of light (the expensive part), accumulating collision events rarer than sightings of snow leopards (the slow part) and building accelerators, detectors, and software to handle the staggering amount of data needed to sift phenomena that occur at the level of parts per billion or trillion (the laborious part).

Neutrino physics exhibits all of these features to the greatest degree. Neutrinos are the least reactive of particles, interact only via the weak nuclear force, and must be made artificially at reactors or accelerators. The neutrino's reticence, however, makes it a good probe for studying the weak force which, unlike electromagnetism or gravity, does not operate over large distances and cannot be measured with a handy machine like a gravimeter or voltmeter.

Instead a sense of the weak force must be pieced together by observing how it mediates (via the charged W bosons and the neutral Z boson) a variety of interactions among quarks, leptons (such as electrons and muons), and neutrinos.

At Fermilab the NuTeV experiment does this by shooting neutrinos and antineutrinos at a target wherein the neutrinos, if they interact at all, do so by scattering from a quark in one of two ways. It can exchange a W boson (in which case the neutrino must turn into a muon); the shuttling W constitutes a tiny charged current. Or the neutrino can retain its identity (not change into a muon) by exchanging a Z boson, which constitutes a tiny neutral current.

By observing how often the neutral current events occur relative to the charged currents events, one can calculate a parameter called the weak mixing angle, which is an indication of how much of the combined electroweak force is electromagnetic in nature (the part of the force which respects "parity," that is, cannot tell left from right) and how much of it is really the weak force (the part of the force which does differentiate between left and right).

The NuTeV measured value for theta (actually the square of the sine of theta) is 0.2277 while the theoretical value is 0.2227. The discrepancy in the rate of neutral current interactions is tiny but interesting because it amounts to a 3-standard-deviation departure.

(Herewith a short statistical discussion about how to deal with the measurement of a value over N trials: the mean value is the sum of all the measurements, divided by N. The variance is the sum of the square of the difference between each measurement and the mean, all divided by N. The standard deviation, is the square root of the variance. Thus the standard deviation, often signified by the Greek letter sigma, is an indication of much individual measurements depart from the mean.)

A three-sigma result (in this case the center-point of the gaussian-shaped measurement distribution lies 3 standard deviations from the theoretical value) is taken by scientists as a significant but not conclusive sign that something interesting is happening.

The NuTeV determination is not the most precise measurement of theta ever made, but it is the most precise measurement made with neutrino interactions, and as NuTeV scientist Kevin McFarland (585-242-9585, ksmcf@pas.rochester.edu) says, there is always the chance that neutrino behavior is different from that of other particles.

Even if this departure holds up, the standard model is by no means in trouble. More likely the experimental results might suggest the existence of particles not seen before, such as the "leptoquark," a hypothetical particle that turns quarks into leptons and vice versa, or the Z-prime boson, a heavier cousin of the Z boson. (Results announced at Fermilab seminar, 26 Oct; text, submitted to Physical Review Letters, available at Rochester website.)