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Delayed-choice quantum eraser

The delayed-choice quantum eraser is an experiment in that demonstrates how the choice to retain or erase which-path information about a can be delayed until after the photon's detection, yet still influence the visibility of patterns through post-selection of correlated data from an entangled partner photon. This setup extends the quantum eraser principle by incorporating elements of John Wheeler's delayed-choice thought experiment, allowing the wave-like or particle-like behavior of the quantum system to appear controlled retroactively, though the results arise solely from quantum correlations without violating . The concept was first proposed in 1982 by Marlan O. Scully and Kai Drühl as a correlation experiment to explore the effects of and information erasure on quantum measurement outcomes. In their setup, entangled s from a source would traverse paths where one carries which-path markers that could later be erased or preserved, with the proposal explicitly including a delayed-choice mode where the erasure decision occurs after initial detection. This theoretical framework aimed to reconcile wave-particle duality by showing how observer-accessible information determines the manifestation of quantum properties. The experiment was experimentally realized in 1999 by Yoon-Ho Kim, Rong Yu, Sergei P. Kulik, Yanhua Shih, and Marlan O. Scully using spontaneous parametric down-conversion to produce polarization-entangled photon pairs in a laboratory at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The signal photon from each pair passes through a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, where its trajectory is detected at one of two output ports, while the idler photon is routed through beam splitters and polarizing analyzers to either reveal or erase path information. Crucially, the idler measurement—which determines the erasure—is performed after the signal detection, introducing the delay, and coincidence counting between the two photons' detectors reveals interference fringes only in subsets where which-path information is unavailable. These results confirm that quantum interference emerges from the global context of the measurement apparatus rather than local events at the source, underscoring the role of entanglement in preserving non-local correlations. Subsequent implementations, such as those using coherent light sources or quantum circuits, have replicated and extended the findings, reinforcing its foundational status in without evidence of retrocausal influences. The delayed-choice quantum eraser thus serves as a key demonstration of how challenges classical intuitions about time and observation in physical processes.

Background Concepts

Double-slit experiment and wave-particle duality

The , first conducted by Thomas Young in 1801, provided compelling evidence for the wave nature of light. Young directed sunlight through a pinhole and then onto a thin card or barrier with two closely spaced parallel slits, observing on a distant screen a series of alternating bright and dark fringes—an pattern characteristic of overlapping waves from the two slits. This result refuted the then-dominant particle theory of light proposed by and supported the idea that light propagates as waves, with the fringes arising from constructive and destructive between wave crests and troughs. In the realm of , the extends to particles such as electrons and , revealing their dual wave-particle nature. For electrons, the Davisson-Germer experiment in 1927 demonstrated wave-like diffraction when a beam was scattered by a nickel crystal, confirming Louis de Broglie's hypothesis that particles have associated wavelengths given by λ = h/p, where h is Planck's constant and p is . The first true double-slit interference with electrons was achieved by Claus Jönsson in 1961, using electron microscopy to create fine slits and observe the expected fringe pattern. For , Geoffrey Ingram Taylor's 1909 experiment reduced light intensity to extremely low levels—equivalent to about one every ten minutes—yet still produced visible interference fringes after long exposure, indicating that even individual quanta of light exhibit wave behavior. In modern setups, particles are emitted one at a time toward the slits; each registers as a localized "particle" hit on the detection screen, but over many trials, the accumulated hits form an interference pattern, underscoring the wave-particle duality. Quantum mechanics explains this duality through the concept of probability amplitudes encoded in the wave function ψ. Unlike classical waves, the wave function does not represent a physical but rather a complex-valued whose squared |ψ|^2 gives the probability of finding the particle at a particular location. In the double-slit setup, the particle's passes through both slits simultaneously in a superposition, and the amplitudes from each path interfere—adding constructively at bright fringes and destructively at dark ones—before the probability distribution is observed upon measurement. This framework, as articulated by , highlights that interference arises from the indistinguishable paths available to the quantum system, essential for predicting the pattern's statistical buildup from single-particle events.

Which-path information and loss of interference

Which-path information refers to the knowledge of the specific a quantum particle takes through one of the two slits in a double-slit setup, distinguishing whether it passed through slit 1 or slit 2. This information contrasts with the superposition of paths that underlies wave-like behavior, as obtaining it reveals particle-like properties at the expense of . The mechanism by which which-path information eliminates interference involves measurement-induced decoherence. When detectors are placed at the slits to record the path, the interaction with the measuring device entangles the particle's path degree of freedom with the detector's state, effectively collapsing the superposition and destroying the coherence between the two paths. This results in a probability distribution on the detection screen that lacks fringes, resembling a classical sum of single-slit diffraction patterns rather than the modulated interference pattern. The loss occurs because the which-path measurement makes the paths distinguishable, preventing the constructive and destructive interference that requires indistinguishability. Mathematically, the intensity or without which-path is given by P(x) = |\psi_1(x) + \psi_2(x)|^2 = |\psi_1(x)|^2 + |\psi_2(x)|^2 + 2 \operatorname{Re} [\psi_1^*(x) \psi_2(x)], where \psi_1(x) and \psi_2(x) are the wave amplitudes from each slit, and the cross term $2 \operatorname{Re} [\psi_1^*(x) \psi_2(x)] produces the fringes. With which-path detection, the phases of \psi_1 and \psi_2 become uncorrelated due to the , so the ensemble average yields \langle P(x) \rangle = |\psi_1(x)|^2 + |\psi_2(x)|^2, eliminating the term. Examples of encoding which-path information include using polarization filters: a horizontal polarizer at one slit and a vertical polarizer at the other tags photons with orthogonal states, allowing path identification via subsequent measurement, which in turn suppresses the interference pattern. Spatial markers, such as micromasers or absorbers at the slits, can similarly provide path distinguishability by altering the particle's state in a slit-specific manner.

Standard quantum eraser experiments

The standard quantum eraser experiments originated with the theoretical proposal by Marlan O. Scully and Kai Drühl in 1982, which demonstrated how quantum correlations could restore interference patterns by effectively erasing which-path information in a double-slit-like setup. In their design, two atoms are coherently excited and positioned along the two paths following a beam splitter, mimicking slits. A signal photon interacts with one atom, stimulating emission that directs the signal toward an interferometer while leaving the atom in an excited state; this excitation later decays, emitting a correlated idler photon whose properties encode the path taken by the signal photon. Detecting the idler photon at path-specific detectors provides which-path knowledge, collapsing the signal photon's wave function and eliminating interference in the overall detection pattern at the signal detector. Erasure occurs when the idler photons from the two paths are made indistinguishable, such as by routing them through a symmetric that scrambles their origins or by not resolving their paths. In this case, the which-path is unavailable, even in , due to the quantum correlations. By post-selecting coincidences between signal and idler detections, the subset of events where has occurred reveals a clear pattern in the signal photon's distribution, with visibility approaching unity in the ideal case, while the total shows no . This restoration highlights that depends not on actual but on the availability of path . Experimental realizations of this concept, beginning in the early 1990s, replaced the atomic excitation with (SPDC) in nonlinear crystals to generate entangled photon pairs as signal and idler, simplifying the setup while preserving the essential correlations. A seminal by et al. in 1995 used -entangled photons from SPDC, where which-path information was encoded in and erased via a polarizing ; counts in the erased yielded fringes with a of approximately 0.82, confirming the theoretical predictions. Subsequent experiments, such as the double-slit by Walborn et al. in 2002 using spatial modes, further validated the effect by achieving visibilities exceeding 0.9 in post-selected data, demonstrating robust erasure without altering the signal photon's trajectory. Unlike classical erasers, which physically remove distinguishing marks (e.g., dissolving ink on a path), the quantum version leverages entanglement between the photons: the idler does not causally affect the signal but correlates detections to reveal or conceal path knowledge retroactively through . This distinction underscores the role of in , where the mere potential for path distinguishability suffices to suppress .

Wheeler's Delayed-Choice Experiment

Original thought experiment

In 1978, physicist proposed a known as the delayed-choice experiment, extending the classic double-slit setup to probe the nature of quantum reality and the role of measurement. In this gedankenexperiment, a single is emitted toward a double-slit apparatus, passing through both slits and propagating as a wave-like superposition of paths. Critically, the experimental configuration is altered after the photon has already traversed the slits but before it reaches the detection screen: detectors are placed at each slit to determine which path the photon took (particle-like behavior, erasing interference), or a beam splitter is inserted in front of the screen to recombine the paths and reveal an interference pattern (wave-like behavior). This delay in the choice seemingly influences the photon's past behavior, as if the decision retroactively determines whether it behaved as a particle or a wave during its flight. Wheeler's motivation was deeply philosophical, aiming to challenge deterministic views of reality and highlight the participatory role of in . He argued that the experiment underscores how the act of at a later time can appear to "reach back" and affect the earlier of the quantum , questioning whether the exists independently of future observations. This setup illustrates the counterintuitive idea that the wave function, describing the photon's probability amplitudes, effectively "adjusts" to the chosen basis without violating or implying true ; instead, the correlations are consistent with the timeless formalism of . To emphasize the experiment's implications for our understanding of the , Wheeler drew an to astronomical scales: consider emitted from a billions of years ago, traveling across vast distances to . Upon arrival, experimenters could choose to measure it in a way that reveals either particle or wave properties, as if deciding retroactively how the "traveled" through the eons earlier. This cosmic variant amplifies the , suggesting that the fundamental nature of light's journey depends on choices made long after its emission.

Experimental realizations

The first experimental realization of Wheeler's delayed-choice gedanken experiment was performed in 1984 by , O. Jakubowicz, C. A. Steggerda, and at the University of Maryland, using attenuated light to approximate single-photon conditions in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer with a delay introduced by path length differences. This partial realization confirmed the quantum predictions, showing consistent behavior regardless of the timing of the choice. Subsequent early tests included partial realizations using coherent light at low intensity, rather than true single photons. In 1987, Hellmuth et al. performed delayed-choice experiments in both spatial and temporal domains using a Mach-Zehnder interferometer with acousto-optic modulators to enable rapid switching between and which-path configurations. These modulators allowed the choice to be made after the light had passed through the first beamsplitter, with switching times on the order of microseconds to simulate the delay. The results showed no observable difference in patterns between standard and delayed-choice modes, with fringe visibility exceeding 90% when paths were recombined, confirming quantum predictions without invoking classical explanations. A landmark full realization came in 2007 with the experiment by Jacques et al., which used true single-photon pulses in a polarization-based Mach-Zehnder interferometer to unambiguously demonstrate the delayed-choice effect. The setup involved a 48-meter-long interferometer where the choice—made by inserting or removing a at the second beamsplitter to either allow or reveal which-path information—was determined by a quantum generator after the had entered the apparatus. This ensured the decision occurred space-like separated from the photon's entry, with the delay corresponding to the photon's propagation time of about 160 nanoseconds. Key results from the Jacques experiment revealed interference visibility of 94 ± 2% in the closed (interferometer) configuration and path distinguishability greater than 99% in the open (which-path) configuration, with the pattern determined solely by the final choice even though it was made post-entry. Technical challenges included achieving high timing precision to verify the delay, with electronics based on FPGA circuits exhibiting of a few nanoseconds, and compensating for propagation delays and detector response times to maintain space-like separation. These experiments provided empirical validation of Wheeler's idea, showing that the photon's behavior aligns with the measurement choice retroactively in appearance, though without actual .

Delayed-Choice Quantum Eraser Setup

Basic principle and apparatus

The delayed-choice quantum eraser experiment merges the concepts of delayed choice and quantum erasure to investigate the nature of wave-particle duality, allowing the apparent behavior of a quantum system to be influenced by a measurement choice made after the system has interacted with the apparatus. Proposed by Marlan O. Scully and Kai Drühl in 1982, the setup utilizes pairs of entangled photons, where one photon (the signal) traverses a choice-enabled interferometer, and the other (the idler) encounters a measurement that can either record or erase which-path information about the signal's trajectory. The key feature is that the decision to erase the idler’s path information is delayed until after the signal photon has passed through the interferometer and been detected, yet the resulting interference pattern for the signal appears to depend on that later choice. The apparatus typically employs spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) in a nonlinear crystal, such as beta-barium borate (BBO), pumped by a laser to generate entangled photon pairs with correlated polarizations and momenta. Entangled photon pairs are generated via spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) in a beta-barium borate (BBO) crystal pumped by an argon-ion laser beam passed through a double-slit mask, creating two distinct emission regions that serve as the effective double slits for the signal photon's interference. The signal photon from each pair is focused by a lens onto a movable detector D₀ in the focal plane, where scanning its position allows observation of interference fringes arising from the two spatially separated emission regions in the crystal, effectively emulating a double-slit experiment. Meanwhile, the idler photon is routed through polarizing beam splitters and quarter-wave plates, which mark orthogonal polarizations to encode which-path information, followed by additional beam splitters that randomly direct it toward either path-distinguishing detectors (D₃ and D₄) or an eraser configuration that mixes the paths via a non-polarizing beam splitter leading to detectors (D₁ and D₂). Polarizing filters and Glen-Thompson prisms ensure the photons are separated by polarization at the source and properly aligned for entanglement preservation throughout the setup. Coincidence counting between the signal detector and each idler detector is essential, as single-photon counts at D₀ show no due to the overall of paths. However, when conditioned on detections at D₁ or D₂ (erased subsets), the coincidence rate versus the interferometer phase exhibits sinusoidal fringes with visibility up to approximately 0.8, while subsets from D₃ or D₄ (marked paths) display no , only a . This outcome creates the central : the delayed erasure choice seems to retroactively determine whether the signal exhibited wave-like or particle-like definiteness, even though no information travels backward in time. Unlike John Archibald 's original delayed-choice experiment, which toggles between and which-slit detection without erasure, the quantum eraser variant conditionally restores by deleting path knowledge in specific subsets.

Role of entanglement in signal and idler photons

In delayed-choice quantum eraser experiments, the entanglement between signal and idler photons is crucial for correlating measurement outcomes across distant paths, enabling the recovery of interference patterns post-detection. This entanglement is typically generated via spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) in nonlinear optical crystals, such as beta-barium borate (BBO). In type-I SPDC, the crystal produces photon pairs with identical polarizations, while type-II SPDC yields pairs with orthogonal polarizations (e.g., horizontal and vertical), directly creating polarization-entangled Bell states like |\Psi^-\rangle = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} (|H\rangle_s |V\rangle_i - |V\rangle_s |H\rangle_i ), where subscripts denote signal (s) and idler (i) photons. This process ensures that the quantum state of one photon is intrinsically linked to the other, regardless of spatial separation. The signal photon is directed to detector D₀ in a far-field setup, where interference patterns emerge from the two effective sources created by a double-slit mask in the pump beam illuminating the . The delayed choice to reveal or erase which-path is implemented in the idler arm's interferometer, with the idler detection occurring after the signal detection due to an optical delay. Meanwhile, the idler photon is sent to a separate arm equipped with a polarization analyzer, such as polarizing s followed by detectors. If the idler is detected at the path-distinguishing outputs (D₃ or D₄) before path mixing, the spatial which-path (corresponding to the emission region) is revealed, suppressing in the signal coincidences. Erasure occurs when the idler paths are mixed by a and detected at the output ports (D₁ or D₂), removing path distinguishability and restoring . These quantum correlations manifest in the conditional interference visibility of the signal , determined by post-selecting idler detection subsets via Bell-state measurements. For configurations, the coincidence rate between signal and idler detectors follows the form R(\theta) \propto 1 + V \cos(\theta), where V quantifies the interference visibility (approaching 1 for perfect erasure), and \theta is the phase shift introduced in the interferometer. This equation highlights how entanglement enforces complementary outcomes: high V when which-path information is unavailable, and V = 0 when it is accessible, without any direct interaction between the photons after generation. The original by Scully and Drühl emphasized such correlations in entangled systems to probe observation and delayed choice, later realized experimentally with SPDC-generated photons.

The Kim et al. Experiment (1999)

Experimental design and procedure

The experimental setup of the 1999 Kim et al. experiment employed a type-II crystal, with a 0.3 mm region and a 0.7 mm separation between two illumination spots labeled A and B, pumped by a 351.1 nm argon ion laser beam divided via a double-slit mask to generate orthogonally polarized entangled signal and idler photon pairs at 702.2 nm. The signal photon followed a shorter path through a focusing lens to the movable detector D₀ positioned in the Fourier plane to scan for potential interference patterns. In contrast, the idler photon traversed an extended path of approximately 2.5 m longer than the signal path, introducing a temporal delay of about 8 ns—sufficient to ensure the "delayed choice" occurs after the signal photon reaches D₀, given the ~1 ns response time of the detectors. The procedure involved directing the delayed idler to an apparatus featuring two 50:50 s, BSA and BSB, which randomly routed it (with 50% probability each) either to which-path detectors D₃ and D₄—preserving path distinguishability from the A or B regions—or to a second 50:50 BS followed by detectors D₁ and D₂, which mixed the paths to obscure the origin. This -mediated choice simulated a random decision between (which-path) and modes, with intermediate subsets obtained by post-selecting coincidences; no physical switch was used, relying instead on the probabilistic splitting for the delayed choice. The signal-idler entanglement from SPDC served as the , enabling correlations without direct post-generation. Detection utilized five EG&G SPCM-AQ series single-photon counting modules (avalanche photodiodes) for D₀ through D₄, coupled with coincidence circuits to record joint detection events between D₀ and each idler detector (R₀₁, R₀₂, R₀₃, R₀₄) using multiple position scans of D₀, accumulating sufficient statistics for analysis. Data subsets were binned by D₀ position (in 0.1 mm steps over ~2 mm) to probe fringes in erasure cases versus envelope distributions in which-path cases, with all counts accumulated simultaneously to maintain the random-choice integrity.

Key results and data analysis

In the experiment conducted by Yoon-Ho Kim, Rong Yu, S. P. Kulik, Y. H. Shih, and Marlan O. Scully and published in Physical Review Letters (vol. 84, p. 1, 2000), the total coincidence counts between the signal photon at detector D₀ and all idler photons show no interference pattern, yielding a visibility of V = 0. In stark contrast, the subset of coincidences where the idler photon is detected at D₁ or D₂—corresponding to erasure of which-path information—exhibits clear sinusoidal interference fringes. Conversely, the subsets for idler detections at D₃ or D₄, which preserve which-path information, display flat distributions with no fringes and V = 0. These findings are illustrated through histograms of coincidence counts plotted against the transverse position of D₀ (ranging from 0 to 3 mm), which scans the phase difference in the double-slit setup; , derived from statistics, are smaller than the data points. Visibility was quantified using the standard formula V = \frac{I_{\max} - I_{\min}}{I_{\max} + I_{\min}}, where I_{\max} and I_{\min} represent the maximum and minimum coincidence rates in the pattern. This data analysis verifies the quantum mechanical predictions for the delayed-choice quantum eraser, as the observed interference restoration in erased subsets cannot be accounted for by classical explanations.

Theoretical Implications

Apparent retrocausality and time symmetry

In the delayed-choice quantum eraser experiment, the signal is detected at its position well before any is performed on its entangled idler , yet the resulting pattern—or its absence—at the signal detector emerges only when conditioned on the later idler outcome. This creates the striking illusion of , where the future choice of whether to measure which-path information (erasing the ) or not (restoring it) appears to reach back and dictate the signal 's earlier path history, as if influencing whether it behaved as a wave or particle in the past. The is evident in the timing: the signal arrives at time t_0, while the idler occurs at t_1 > t_0, but the data at t_0 seems to "know" the decision made at t_1. John Archibald Wheeler, who originated the delayed-choice concept, emphasized this apparent backward influence as a feature of ' time symmetry, where the of events is not fixed until determined by present observations. In his view, this points to a participatory , in which future measurements retroactively shape the reality of prior quantum events, with observers actively participating in defining the universe's history rather than passively observing a predetermined . illustrated this by noting that a delayed setting of the measurement apparatus allows "an inescapable influence on what we have the right to say about what we call the ," suggesting that quantum processes lack a strict temporal in their descriptive framework. Extending Wheeler's to the quantum eraser, one might ask whether the idler measurement choice truly alters the signal photon's historical trajectory—such as forcing it to have traversed both paths or a single one retroactively—thereby implying that the photon's behavior was indeterminate until the future intervention. This raises profound questions about whether quantum events possess a definite past of later choices, or if the entire entangled system's evolution transcends conventional time ordering. A common misconception is that this demonstrates genuine causation propagating backward in time; in reality, the observed correlations stem from the pre-existing entanglement between signal and idler photons, without any actual alteration of past events.

Resolutions and no-signaling theorem

The apparent in delayed-choice quantum eraser experiments arises from a misunderstanding of quantum correlations, but all observed effects are forward-causal. Entanglement between the signal and idler pre-determines the joint outcomes at detection, with the delayed choice on the idler merely selecting which subset of signal detections to analyze via post-selection. This post-selection reveals patterns in specific coincidence counts, without altering the past trajectory of the signal , as the full of signal always shows no regardless of the idler . The no-signaling theorem ensures that measurements on the idler cannot transmit to the signal , preserving . Formally, the reduced for the signal , obtained by tracing over the idler , remains independent of the basis chosen for the idler , meaning the marginal statistics of signal detections are unaffected by the delayed choice. This theorem vindicates the experiment's consistency with , as no causal influence propagates backward in time. The holds that the effects in delayed-choice quantum erasers stem from post-selection and quantum correlations, not time reversal or , aligning with interpretations such as the view—where phenomena are defined only upon observation—and the , where all outcomes coexist in branching realities. Subsequent theoretical analyses and experimental realizations up to 2025 have found no evidence supporting , reinforcing that the experiment exemplifies quantum complementarity without violating .

Subsequent Experiments and Variations

Nonlinear crystal implementations

Following the foundational 1999 experiment by Kim et al., subsequent implementations of the delayed-choice quantum eraser have utilized nonlinear s to generate entangled photon pairs via (SPDC), enabling higher efficiency and precision in demonstrating wave-particle duality. These setups typically involve a pump incident on the crystal to produce signal and idler s, with the signal photon traversing an interferometer or double-slit, and the idler used for delayed measurement to erase or retain which-path information. A key example is the 2002 experiment by Walborn et al., which employed type-II beta-barium borate (BBO) crystals pumped by a 351.1 nm continuous-wave , yielding polarization-entangled pairs at 702.2 nm. The signal passed through a double-slit (separation 0.2 mm, width 200 μm), creating at a detector 125 cm away, while the idler path included polarizing elements for delayed choice of erasure. This design achieved visibility exceeding 0.9 through enhanced entanglement fidelity, limited primarily by residual distinguishability in paths, and counts up to a few hundred over integration times of several hundred seconds. In the 2000s, implementations incorporated pulsed lasers, such as mode-locked Ti:sapphire lasers producing 100 fs pulses, to drive SPDC in BBO crystals, improving in coincidence electronics to ~200 ps. This allowed stricter control over the delay between signal detection and idler measurement, up to several meters of path difference, while maintaining high visibility (~0.95) in eraser subsets and explicitly verifying compliance with the no-signaling theorem. A significant advancement in these implementations is the use of periodically poled (PPKTP) crystals for type-II SPDC in later experiments, which provide quasi-phase-matching for brighter pair generation rates (up to 10^6 pairs/s/mW) and narrower spectral bandwidths compared to birefringent BBO. For example, modern setups using PPKTP have reduced required windows to under 1 ns, minimizing accidental s and enabling robust observation of conditional even with shorter delays. Results from these crystal-based experiments uniformly align with quantum mechanical predictions, exhibiting full recovery (V ≈ 1) in the erased subset and no fringes (V ≈ 0) in the which-path subset, without evidence of or paradoxes beyond the original formulation.

Atomic ensemble and other advanced setups

In 2009, Ma et al. demonstrated hybrid entanglement between photons and atomic ensembles, laying a foundation for integrating light-matter systems in quantum eraser protocols by enabling entanglement between photons and collective atomic excitations. This work highlighted the potential for extending quantum eraser effects to hybrid light-matter interfaces, though direct implementations followed later. A significant advancement came in 2020 with Dong et al.'s experiment using cold atomic ensembles to realize a temporal Wheeler's delayed- setup, effectively demonstrating the quantum eraser effect with atomic . Three ensembles of ^85Rb atoms trapped in 2D magneto-optical traps served as Raman memory-based s in a temporal Mach-Zehnder interferometer, where single s generated via spontaneous were used to probe wave-particle duality. The to insert or remove the second was made randomly after the entered the interferometer, yielding interference visibilities of up to 0.25, consistent with storage efficiencies of 15-25%, and showing intermediate behaviors tunable by the probability (ξ = 0 to 1). This verified the no-signaling theorem and ruled out local hidden-variable models, highlighting the effect's applicability to . In the 2020s, integrated photonic technologies enabled scalable implementations of delayed-choice quantum erasers. For instance, Wang et al. in 2021 reported a generalized multipath version on a photonic chip with up to 8 interferometric paths, using entangled pairs to test delayed-choice wave-particle duality in high dimensions. The chip-based interferometer achieved path counts up to 8 with phase stability better than 1 , producing visibilities of 0.95 in the wave-like configuration and near-zero in the particle-like case, demonstrating the effect's robustness in compact, on-chip setups suitable for quantum networks. A 2023 experiment by Kim et al. further optimized coherent sources for protocols using a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, attaining near-perfect visibility (with ~50% event selection loss) while maintaining no-signaling conditions via space-like separation. These integrated and coherent-light systems underscore the transition from bulk to scalable platforms, with potential for high-rate operations exceeding 10^6 events per second. Other advanced variations include extensions to multi-particle erasers using entangled states beyond pairs. These multi-particle setups have confirmed the effect's generality, with no deviations from quantum predictions observed. Recent experiments as of 2024, such as phase-controlled implementations with coherent photons and a neutron-based delayed-choice quantum , continue to align with standard , exploring applications in quantum networks and tests. Theoretical proposals have also explored uses in fault-tolerant gates, such as conditional phase shifts via eraser-induced interference for error correction.

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