QUANTUM COHERENCE IN NEUTRON SCATTERING ON PROTONS

2004 
Several recent observations of closely spaced hydrogen nuclei in condensed matter systems — water, polymers and metal hydrides — indicate that they cannot be considered as independent quantum objects when observed over very short time intervals. According to these measurements, pairs (or possibly small clusters) of protons or deuterons seem to be quantum correlated, and are able to preserve their mutual quantum phase relations over times of the order of femtoseconds even in strongly perturbing liquid or solid environments. These new experimental results are mainly based on scattering of neutrons with time windows in the atto- and femtosecond range, but there also exists corroborating evidence from other spectroscopies. When the width of the observational time window is increased above a characteristic value, the quantum coherence effects are seen to disappear. This time limit marks the onset of decoherence as the mutual phase relations between the particles are gradually lost. Possible reasons for short-time entanglement of nuclei in condensed matter systems, as well as mechanisms for its decoherence will be discussed.
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