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Coherence (physics)



 
 
In physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
, coherence is a property of waves, that enables stationary (i.e. temporally and spatially constant) interference
Interference

In physics, interference is the addition of two or more waves that result in a new wave pattern.Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves which are correlated or Coherence with each other, either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency....
. More generally, coherence describes all correlation
Correlation

In probability theory and statistics, correlation indicates the strength and direction of a linear relationship between two random variables....
 properties between physical quantities of a wave.

When interfering, waves add together to one big wave or destruct each other to a lot of smaller waves, depending on their relative phase
Phase (waves)

The phase of an oscillation or wave is the fraction of a complete cycle corresponding to an offset in the displacement from a specified reference point at time t = 0....
. Two waves are said to be coherent if they have a constant relative phase, which also implies that they have the same frequency.






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In physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
, coherence is a property of waves, that enables stationary (i.e. temporally and spatially constant) interference
Interference

In physics, interference is the addition of two or more waves that result in a new wave pattern.Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves which are correlated or Coherence with each other, either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency....
. More generally, coherence describes all correlation
Correlation

In probability theory and statistics, correlation indicates the strength and direction of a linear relationship between two random variables....
 properties between physical quantities of a wave.

When interfering, waves add together to one big wave or destruct each other to a lot of smaller waves, depending on their relative phase
Phase (waves)

The phase of an oscillation or wave is the fraction of a complete cycle corresponding to an offset in the displacement from a specified reference point at time t = 0....
. Two waves are said to be coherent if they have a constant relative phase, which also implies that they have the same frequency. The degree of coherence
Degree of coherence

In optics, correlation functions are used to characterize the statistical and Coherence properties of an electromagnetic field. The degree of coherence is the normalized correlation of electric fields....
 is measured by the interference visibility, a measure of how perfectly the waves can cancel due to destructive interference.

Introduction

Coherence was originally introduced in connection with Young’s double-slit experiment
Double-slit experiment

The double-slit experiment in quantum mechanics is an experiment that demonstrates the inseparability of the wave and Elementary particle natures of light and other quantum particles....
 in optics
Optics

Optics is the study of the behavior and properties of light including its optical phenomena with matter and its imaging by optical instruments....
 but is now used in any field that involves waves, such as acoustics
Acoustics

Acoustics is the interdisciplinary science that deals with the study of sound, ultrasound and infrasound . A scientist who works in the field of acoustics is an acoustician....
, electrical engineering
Electrical engineering

Electrical engineering, sometimes referred to as electrical and electronic engineering, is a field of engineering that deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism....
, neuroscience
Neuroscience

Neuroscience is a field devoted to the scientific study of the nervous system. The Society for Neuroscience was founded in 1969, but the study of the brain started a long time ago....
, and quantum physics. The property of coherence is the basis for commercial applications such as holography
Holography

A hologram is a picture that changes when looked at from different angles.Holography is a technique that allows the light scattered from an object to be recorded and later reconstructed so that it appears as if the object is in the same position relative to the recording medium as it was when recorded....
, the Sagnac gyroscope
Gyroscope

A gyroscope is a device for measuring or maintaining orientation , based on the principles of angular momentum. The device is a spinning wheel or disk whose axle is free to take any orientation....
, radio
Radio

Radio is the transmission of signals, by modulation of electromagnetic radiation with frequency below those of visible light.Electromagnetic radiation radio propagation by means of oscillating electromagnetic fields that pass through the air and the vacuum of space....
 antenna array
Phased array

This article is about general theory and electromagnetic phased array.'For the ultrasonic and medical imaging application, see phased array ultrasonics....
s, optical coherence tomography
Optical coherence tomography

Optical coherence tomography is an optical signal acquisition and processing method allowing extremely high-quality, micrometre-resolution, three-dimensional images from within optical scattering media to be obtained....
 and telescope interferometers (astronomical optical interferometers
Interferometry

Interferometry is the technique of diagnosing the properties of two or more waves by studying the pattern of interference created by their Superposition principle....
 and radio telescope
Radio telescope

A radio telescope is a form of Directional antennae radio Antenna used in radio astronomy and in tracking and collecting data from satellites and space probes....
s).

Coherence and correlation

The coherence of two waves follows from how well correlated the waves are as quantified by the cross-correlation
Cross-correlation

In signal processing, cross-correlation is a measure of similarity of two waveforms as a function of a time-lag applied to one of them. This is also known as a sliding dot product or inner-product....
 function. The cross-correlation quantifies the ability to predict the value of the second wave by knowing the value of the first. As an example, consider two waves perfectly correlated for all times. At any time, if the first wave changes, the second will change in the same way. If combined they can exhibit complete constructive interference at all times. It follows that they are perfectly coherent. As will be discussed below, the second wave need not be a separate entity. It could be the first wave at a different time or position. In this case, sometimes called self-coherence, the measure of correlation is the autocorrelation
Autocorrelation

Autocorrelation is a mathematical tool for finding repeating patterns, such as the presence of a periodic signal which has been buried under noise, or identifying the missing fundamental frequency in a signal implied by its harmonic frequencies....
 function.

Examples of wave-like states

These states are unified by the fact that their behavior is described by a wave equation
Wave equation

The wave equation is an important second-order linear partial differential equation that describes the propagation of a variety of waves, such as sound waves, light waves and water waves....
 or some generalization thereof.
  • Waves in a rope (up and down) or slinky
    Slinky

    Slinky is a helix-shaped toy that can travel down stairs end-over-end as it stretches and re-forms itself with the aid of gravity and its own momentum....
     (compression and expansion)
  • Surface waves in a liquid
  • Electric signals (fields) in transmission cables
  • Sound
    Sound

    Sound is vibration transmitted through a solid, liquid, or gas, composed of frequencies within the range of hearing and of a threshold of hearing to be heard, or the sensation stimulated in organs of hearing by such vibrations....
  • Radio
    Radio

    Radio is the transmission of signals, by modulation of electromagnetic radiation with frequency below those of visible light.Electromagnetic radiation radio propagation by means of oscillating electromagnetic fields that pass through the air and the vacuum of space....
     and Microwaves
  • Light
    Light

    Light, or visible light, is electromagnetic radiation of a wavelength that is Visible spectrum to the human eye , or up to 380?750 nm. In the broader field of physics, light is sometimes used to refer to electromagnetic radiation of all wavelengths, whether visible or not....
     (optics
    Optics

    Optics is the study of the behavior and properties of light including its optical phenomena with matter and its imaging by optical instruments....
    )
  • Electrons, atoms, and any other object (as described by quantum physics)


In most of these systems, one can measure the wave directly. Consequently, its correlation with another wave can simply be calculated. However, in optics one cannot measure the electric field
Electric field

In physics, the space surrounding an electric charge or in the presence of a time-varying magnetic field has a property called an electric field ....
 directly as it oscillates much faster than any detector’s time resolution. Instead, we measure the intensity
Intensity (physics)

In physics, intensity is a Measurement of the time averaging energy flux. The word "intensity" here is not synonymous with "wikt:strength", "wikt:amplitude", or "wikt:level", as it sometimes is in colloquial speech....
 of the light. Most of the concepts involving coherence which will be introduced below were developed in the field of optics and then used in other fields. Therefore, many of the standard measurements of coherence are indirect measurements, even in fields where the wave can be measured directly.

Temporal coherence

Single Frequency
Phase Drift
Temporal coherence is the measure of the average correlation between the value of a wave at any pair of times, separated by delay t. Temporal coherence tells us how monochromatic a source is. In other words, it characterizes how well a wave can interfere with itself at a different time. The delay over which the phase or amplitude wanders by a significant amount (and hence the correlation decreases by significant amount) is defined as the coherence time
Coherence time

For an electromagnetic wave, the coherence time is the time over which a propagating wave may be considered coherence . In other words, it is the time interval within which its phase is, on average, predictable....
 tc. At t=0 the degree of coherence is perfect whereas it drops significantly by delay tc. The coherence length
Coherence length

In physics, coherence length is the wave propagation distance from a coherence source to a point where an electromagnetic wave maintains a specified degree of coherence....
 Lc is defined as the distance the wave travels in time tc.

One should be careful not to confuse the coherence time with the time duration of the signal, nor the coherence length with the coherence area (see below).

The relationship between coherence time and bandwidth

It can be shown that the faster a wave decorrelates (and hence the smaller tc is) the larger the range of frequencies ?f the wave contains. Thus there is a tradeoff:

.

In terms of wavelength this relationship becomes,

Formally, this follows from the convolution theorem
Convolution theorem

In mathematics, the convolution theorem states that under suitableconditions the Fourier transform of a convolution is the pointwise product of Fourier transforms....
 in mathematics, which relates the Fourier transform
Fourier transform

In mathematics, Fourier analysis is a subject area which grew out of the study of Fourier series. The subject began with trying to understand when it was possible to represent general functions by sums of simpler trigonometric functions....
 of the power spectrum (the intensity of each frequency) to its autocorrelation
Autocorrelation

Autocorrelation is a mathematical tool for finding repeating patterns, such as the presence of a periodic signal which has been buried under noise, or identifying the missing fundamental frequency in a signal implied by its harmonic frequencies....
.

Examples of temporal coherence

We consider four examples of temporal coherence.
  • A wave containing only a single frequency (monochromatic) is perfectly correlated at all times according to the above relation. (See Figure 1)
  • Conversely, a wave whose phase drifts quickly will have a short coherence time. (See Figure 2)
  • Similarly, pulses (wave packet
    Wave packet

    In physics, a wave packet is an envelope or packet containing a number of plane waves having different wavenumbers or wavelengths, chosen such that their phases and amplitudes interfere constructively over a small region of space....
    s) of waves, which naturally have a broad range of frequencies, also have a short coherence time since the amplitude of the wave changes quickly. (See Figure 3)
  • Finally, white light, which has a very broad range of frequencies, is a wave which varies quickly in both amplitude and phase. Since it consequently has a very short coherence time (just 10 periods or so), it is often called incoherent.


The most monochromatic sources are usually laser
Laser

A laser is a device that emits light through a process called stimulated emission. The term laser is an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation....
s; such high monochromaticity implies long coherence lengths (up to hundreds of meters). For example, a stabilized helium-neon laser
Helium-neon laser

A helium-neon laser, usually called a HeNe laser, is a type of small gas laser. HeNe lasers have many industrial and scientific uses, and are often used in laboratory demonstrations of optics....
 can produce light with coherence lengths in excess of 5 m. Not all lasers are monochromatic, however (e.g. for a mode-locked Ti-sapphire laser
Ti-sapphire laser

File:Titanium sapphire oscillator.jpgTi:sapphire lasers are tunable lasers which emit red and infrared light in the range from 650 to 1100 nanometers....
, ?? ˜ 2 nm - 70 nm). LEDs are characterized by ?? ˜ 50 nm, and tungsten filament lights exhibit ?? ˜ 600 nm, so these sources have shorter coherence times than the most monochromatic lasers.

Holography
Holography

A hologram is a picture that changes when looked at from different angles.Holography is a technique that allows the light scattered from an object to be recorded and later reconstructed so that it appears as if the object is in the same position relative to the recording medium as it was when recorded....
 requires light with a long coherence time. In contrast, Optical coherence tomography
Optical coherence tomography

Optical coherence tomography is an optical signal acquisition and processing method allowing extremely high-quality, micrometre-resolution, three-dimensional images from within optical scattering media to be obtained....
 uses light with a short coherence time.

Measurement of temporal coherence

Wave Packets
Interference Finite Coherence
In optics, temporal coherence is measured in an interferometer such as the Michelson interferometer
Michelson interferometer

The Michelson interferometer is the most common configuration for optical interferometry and was invented by Albert Abraham Michelson. An interference pattern is produced by splitting a beam of light into two paths, bouncing the beams back and recombining them....
 or Mach-Zehnder interferometer
Mach-Zehnder interferometer

The Mach-Zehnder interferometer is a device used to determine the Phase caused by a small sample which is placed in the path of one of two collimated beams from a Coherence light source....
. In these devices, a wave is combined with a copy of itself that is delayed by time t. A detector measures the time-averaged intensity of the light exiting the interferometer. The resulting interference visibility (e.g. see Figure 4) gives the temporal coherence at delay t. Since for most natural light sources, the coherence time is much shorter than the time resolution of any detector, the detector itself does the time averaging. Consider the example shown in Figure 3. At a fixed delay, here 2tc, an infinitely fast detector would measure an intensity that fluctuates significantly over a time t equal to tc. In this case, to find the temporal coherence at 2tc, one would manually time-average the intensity.


Spatial coherence

In some systems, such as water waves or optics, wave-like states can extend over one or two dimensions. Spatial coherence describes the ability for two points in space, x1 and x2, in the extent of a wave to interfere, when averaged over time. More precisely, the spatial coherence is the cross-correlation
Cross-correlation

In signal processing, cross-correlation is a measure of similarity of two waveforms as a function of a time-lag applied to one of them. This is also known as a sliding dot product or inner-product....
 between two points in a wave for all times. If a wave has only 1 value of amplitude over an infinite length, it is perfectly spatially coherent. The range of separation between the two points over which there is significant interference is called the coherence area, Ac. This is the relevant type of coherence for the Young’s double-slit interferometer. It is also used in optical imaging systems and particularly in various types of astronomy telescopes. Sometimes people also use “spatial coherence” to refer to the visibility when a wave-like state is combined with a spatially shifted copy of itself.

Examples of spatial coherence

Image:spatial_coherence_infinite_ex1.png|Figure 5: A plane wave with an infinite coherence length
Coherence length

In physics, coherence length is the wave propagation distance from a coherence source to a point where an electromagnetic wave maintains a specified degree of coherence....
.
Image:spatial_coherence_infinite_ex2.png|Figure 6: A wave with a varying profile (wavefront) and infinite coherence length. Image:spatial_coherence_finite.png|Figure 7: A wave with a varying profile (wavefront) and finite coherence length. Image:spatial_coherence_pinhole.png|Figure 8: A wave with finite coherence area is incident on a pinhole (small aperture). The wave will diffract
Diffraction

Diffraction is normally taken to refer to various phenomena which occur when a wave encounters an obstacle. It is described as the apparent bending of waves around small obstacles and the spreading out of waves past small openings....
 out of the pinhole. Far from the pinhole the emerging spherical wavefronts are approximately flat. The coherence area is now infinite while the coherence length is unchanged.
Image:spatial_coherence_detector.png|Figure 9: A wave with infinite coherence area is combined with a spatially-shifted copy of itself. Some sections in the wave interfere constructively and some will interfere destructively. Averaging over these sections, a detector with length D will measure reduced interference visibility. For example a misaligned Mach-Zehnder interferometer will do this.


Consider a tungsten light-bulb filament. Different points in the filament emit light independently and have no fixed phase-relationship. In detail, at any point in time the profile of the emitted light is going to be distorted. The profile will change randomly over the coherence time . Since for a white-light source such as a light-bulb is small, the filament is considered a spatially incoherent source. In contrast, a radio antenna array
Phased array

This article is about general theory and electromagnetic phased array.'For the ultrasonic and medical imaging application, see phased array ultrasonics....
, has large spatial coherence because antennas at opposite ends of the array emit with a fixed phase-relationship. Light waves produced by a laser often have high temporal and spatial coherence (though the degree of coherence depends strongly on the exact properties of the laser). Spatial coherence of laser beams also manifests itself as speckle patterns and diffraction fringes seen at the edges of shadow.

Holography requires temporally and spatially coherent light. Its inventor, Dennis Gabor, produced successful holograms more than ten years before lasers were invented. To produce coherent light he passed the monochromatic light from an emission line of a mercury-vapor lamp through a pinhole spatial filter.

Spectral coherence

Spectral Coherence Pulse
Spectral Coherence Continuous
Waves of different frequencies (in light these are different colours) can interfere to form a pulse if they have a fixed relative phase-relationship (see Fourier transform
Fourier transform

In mathematics, Fourier analysis is a subject area which grew out of the study of Fourier series. The subject began with trying to understand when it was possible to represent general functions by sums of simpler trigonometric functions....
). Conversely, if waves of different frequencies are not coherent, then, when combined, they create a wave that is continuous in time (e.g. white light or white noise
White noise

White noise is a random signal with a flat power spectral density. In other words, the signal contains equal power within a fixed bandwidth at any center frequency....
). The temporal duration of the pulse is limited by the spectral bandwidth of the light according to:

,

which follows from the properties of the Fourier transform (for quantum particles it also results in the Heisenberg uncertainty principle).

If the phase depends linearly on the frequency (i.e. ) then the pulse will have the minimum time duration for its bandwidth (a transform-limited pulse), otherwise it is chirped (see dispersion
Dispersion (optics)

In optics, dispersion is the phenomenon in which the phase velocity of a wave depends on its frequency.Media having such a property are termed dispersive media....
).

Measurement of spectral coherence

Measurement of the spectral coherence of light requires a nonlinear
Nonlinear optics

Nonlinear optics is the branch of optics that describes the behaviour of light in nonlinear media, that is, media in which the dielectric polarization P responds nonlinearly to the electric field E of the light....
 optical interferometer, such as an intensity optical correlator
Optical autocorrelation

In optics, various autocorrelation functions can be experimentally realized. The field autocorrelation may be used to calculate the spectrum of a source of light, while the intensity autocorrelation and the interferometric autocorrelation are commonly used to estimate the duration of ultrashort pulse produced by modelocking lasers....
, frequency-resolved optical gating
Frequency-resolved optical gating

In optics, frequency-resolved optical gating is a derivative of optical autocorrelation, but is far superior in its ability to measure ultrashort pulse shapes....
 (FROG), or Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction
Spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction

In ultrafast optics, spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction is an ultrashort pulse measurement technique....
 (SPIDER).


Polarization coherence

Light also has a polarization
Polarization

Polarization is a property of waves that describes the orientation of their oscillations. For transverse waves such as many electromagnetic waves, it describes the orientation of the oscillations in the plane perpendicular to the wave's direction of travel....
, which is the direction in which the electric field oscillates. Unpolarized light is composed of two equally intense incoherent light waves with orthogonal polarizations. The electric field of the unpolarized light wanders in every direction and changes in phase over the coherence time of the two light waves. A polarizer
Polarizer

A polarizer is a device that converts an polarization or mixed-polarization beam of electromagnetic waves into a beam with a single polarization state ....
 rotated to any angle will always transmit half the incident intensity when averaged over time.

If the electric field wanders by a smaller amount the light will be partially polarized so that at some angle, the polarizer will transmit more than half the intensity. If a wave is combined with an orthogonally polarized copy of itself delayed by less than the coherence time, partially polarized light is created.

The polarization of a light beam is represented by a vector in the Poincare sphere
Polarization

Polarization is a property of waves that describes the orientation of their oscillations. For transverse waves such as many electromagnetic waves, it describes the orientation of the oscillations in the plane perpendicular to the wave's direction of travel....
. For polarized light the end of the vector lies on the surface of the sphere, whereas the vector has zero length for unpolarized light. The vector for partially polarized light lies within the sphere

Applications


Holography

Coherent superpositions of optical wave fields include holography
Holography

A hologram is a picture that changes when looked at from different angles.Holography is a technique that allows the light scattered from an object to be recorded and later reconstructed so that it appears as if the object is in the same position relative to the recording medium as it was when recorded....
. Holographic objects are used frequently in daily life in bank notes and credit cards.

Non-optical wave fields

Further applications concern the coherent superposition of non-optical wave fields. In quantum mechanics for example one considers a probability field, which is related to the wave function (interpretation: density of the probability amplitude). Here the applications concern, among others, the future technologies of quantum computing and the already available technology of quantum cryptography
Quantum cryptography

Quantum cryptography, or quantum key distribution , uses quantum mechanics to guarantee secure communication. It enables two parties to produce a shared random bit string known only to them, which can be used as a key to encrypt and decrypt messages....
. Additionally the problems of the following subchapter are treated.

Quantum coherence and the range limitation problem

In quantum mechanics
Quantum mechanics

Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale . Notable amongst these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certaintie...
, all objects have wave-like properties (see de Broglie wave
De Broglie hypothesis

In physics, the matter wave, aka de Broglie wave , is the wave-like nature of all matter . The de Broglie relations show that the wavelength is inversely proportional to the momentum of a particle and that the frequency is directly proportional to the particle's kinetic energy....
s). For instance, in Young's double-slit experiment electrons can be used in the place of light waves. Each electron can go through either slit and hence has two paths that it can take to a particular final position. In quantum mechanics these two paths interfere. If there is destructive interference, the electron never arrives at that particular position. This ability to interfere is called quantum coherence.

The quantum description of perfectly coherent paths is called a pure state, in which the two paths are combined in a superposition
Quantum superposition

Quantum superposition is the fundamental law of quantum mechanics. It defines the allowed state space of a quantum mechanical system.In Probability theory, every possible event has a non-negative real number between zero and one associated to it, the probability, which gives the chance that it happens....
. The correlation between the two particles exceeds what would be predicted for classical correlation alone (see Bell's inequalities). If this two-particle system is decohered (which would occur in a measurement via Einselection
Einselection

Einselection is short for environment - induced superselection, a nickname coined by Wojciech H. Zurek. Classicality is an emergent property induced in Open_quantum_system by their environments....
), then there is no longer any phase relationship between the two states. The quantum description of imperfectly coherent paths is called a mixed state, described by a density matrix
Density matrix

In quantum mechanics, a density matrix is a self-adjoint positive-semidefinite matrix, , of trace class one, that describes the statistical state of a quantum system....
 (also called "statistical operator") and is entirely analogous to a classical system of mixed probabilities (the correlations are classical).

Large-scale (macroscopic
Macroscopic

Macroscopic is a word commonly used to describe physics objects that are measurement and observation by the naked eye. When applied to phenomena and abstract objects, it describes existence in the world as we perceive it....
) quantum coherence leads to very amazing phenomena. For instance, the laser
Laser

A laser is a device that emits light through a process called stimulated emission. The term laser is an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation....
, superconductivity
Superconductivity

Superconductivity is a phenomenon occurring in certain materials generally at very low temperatures, characterized by exactly zero electrical resistance and the exclusion of the interior magnetic field ....
, and superfluidity are examples of highly coherent quantum systems. One example that shows the amazing possibilities of macroscopic quantum coherence is the Schrödinger's cat
Schrödinger's cat

Schr?dinger's cat is a thought experiment, often described as a paradox, devised by Austrian physicist Erwin Schr?dinger in 1935. It illustrates what he saw as the problem of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics being applied to everyday objects....
 thought experiment. Another example of quantum coherence is in a Bose-Einstein condensate. Here, all the atoms that make up the condensate are in-phase; they are thus necessarily all described by a single quantum wavefunction; their behavior is communal and inseparable until the coherence is destroyed.

Especially, the coherence is destroyed, if at the end of a long "coherent wave guide", presently realized through glass fibres, a signal magnification is necessary. The magnification processes usually involve a certain randomness, which hampers coherence and implies a range limitation of methods based on it. This implies, for example, that the methods of quantum cryptography are presently, in 2008, limited to a range of typically 100 km.

See also

  • Atomic coherence
    Atomic coherence

    In physics, atomic coherence is the induced Coherence between levels of a multi-level atomic system sometimes observed when it interacts with a coherent electromagnetic field....
  • Coherence length
    Coherence length

    In physics, coherence length is the wave propagation distance from a coherence source to a point where an electromagnetic wave maintains a specified degree of coherence....
  • Coherent state
    Coherent state

    In quantum mechanics a coherent state is a specific kind of quantum state of the quantum harmonic oscillator whose dynamics most closely resemble the oscillating behaviour of a classical harmonic oscillator system....
  • Optical heterodyne detection
    Optical heterodyne detection

    Optical heterodyne detection is special case of heterodyne detection. In heterodyne detection, a signal of interest at some frequency is non-linearly mixed with a reference "local oscillator" that is set at a close-by frequency....
  • Quantum decoherence
    Quantum decoherence

    In quantum mechanics, quantum decoherence is the mechanism by which quantum systems interact with their environments to exhibit probabilistically additive behavior....
  • Quantum Zeno effect
    Quantum Zeno effect

    The quantum Zeno effect is a name coined by George Sudarshan and Baidyanaith Misra of the University of Texas at Austin in 1977 in their analysis of the situation in which an unstable particle, if observed continuously, will never decay....
  • Measurement problem
    Measurement problem

    The measurement problem in quantum mechanics is the unresolved problem of how wavefunction collapse occurs. The inability to observe this process directly has given rise to different interpretations of quantum mechanics, and poses a key set of questions that each interpretation must answer....
  • Measurement in quantum mechanics
    Measurement in quantum mechanics

    The framework of quantum mechanics requires a careful definition of measurement, and a thorough discussion of its practical and philosophical implications....