Violation of Heisenberg's error-disturbance uncertainty relation in neutron spin measurements

2013 
In its original formulation, Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle dealt with the relationship between the error of a quantum measurement and the thereby induced disturbance on the measured object. Meanwhile, Heisenberg’s heuristic arguments have turned out to be correct only for special cases. A new universally valid relation was derived by Ozawa in 2003. Here, we demonstrate that Ozawa’s predictions hold for projective neutron-spin measurements. The experimental inaccessibility of error and disturbance claimed elsewhere has been overcome using a tomographic method. By a systematic variation of experimental parameters in the entire conguration space, the physical behavior of error and disturbance for projective spin- 1 measurements is illustrated comprehensively. The violation of Heisenberg’s original relation, as well as, the validity of Ozawa’s relation become manifest. In addition, our results conclude that the widespread assumption of a reciprocal relation between error and disturbance is not valid in general.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    4
    References
    95
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []