Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures

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Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures. / Ellegaard, Clive Sigurd; Levinsen, Mogens.

In: Physical Review E, Vol. 102, 023115, 26.08.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ellegaard, CS & Levinsen, M 2020, 'Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures', Physical Review E, vol. 102, 023115. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.023115

APA

Ellegaard, C. S., & Levinsen, M. (2020). Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures. Physical Review E, 102, [023115]. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.023115

Vancouver

Ellegaard CS, Levinsen M. Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures. Physical Review E. 2020 Aug 26;102. 023115. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.102.023115

Author

Ellegaard, Clive Sigurd ; Levinsen, Mogens. / Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures. In: Physical Review E. 2020 ; Vol. 102.

Bibtex

@article{f5b7950b49fe45688df1773ee648544b,
title = "Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures",
abstract = "Just over a decade ago Couder and Fort [Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 154101 (2006)] published a provocative paper suggesting that a classical system might be able to simulate the truly fundamental quantum mechanical single- and double-slit experiment. The system they investigated was that of an oil droplet walking on a vibrated oil surface. Their results have since been challenged by Andersen et al. [Phys. Rev. E 92, 013006 (2015)] by pointing to insufficient statistical support and a lack of experimental control over critical parameters. Here we show that the randomness in the original experiment is an artifact of lack of control. We present experimental data from an extensive scan of the parameter space of the system including the use of different size slits and tight control of critical parameters. For the single-slit we find very diverse samples of interference-like patterns but all causal by nature. This also holds for the double-slit. However, an extra interference effect appears here. The origin of this is investigated by blocking either the inlet or the outlet of one slit. Hereby we show that the extra interference is solely due to back-scatter of the associated wave field from the outlet of the slit not passed by the droplet. Recently Pucci et al. [J. Fluid Mech. 835, 1136 (2018)] using a much broader slit also showed that the classical system is basically causal. They, too, observed the extra interference effect for the double-slit. However, the reason behind was not determined. Moreover they claimed the existence of a chaotic regime just below the cri- tical acceleration for spontaneous generation of Faraday surface waves. Our measurements do not support the validity of this claim. However, the drop dynamics turns out to have an interesting multifaceted interaction with the slit structure.",
author = "Ellegaard, {Clive Sigurd} and Mogens Levinsen",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1103/PhysRevE.102.023115",
language = "English",
volume = "102",
journal = "Physical Review E",
issn = "2470-0045",
publisher = "American Physical Society",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interaction of wave-driven particles with slit structures

AU - Ellegaard, Clive Sigurd

AU - Levinsen, Mogens

PY - 2020/8/26

Y1 - 2020/8/26

N2 - Just over a decade ago Couder and Fort [Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 154101 (2006)] published a provocative paper suggesting that a classical system might be able to simulate the truly fundamental quantum mechanical single- and double-slit experiment. The system they investigated was that of an oil droplet walking on a vibrated oil surface. Their results have since been challenged by Andersen et al. [Phys. Rev. E 92, 013006 (2015)] by pointing to insufficient statistical support and a lack of experimental control over critical parameters. Here we show that the randomness in the original experiment is an artifact of lack of control. We present experimental data from an extensive scan of the parameter space of the system including the use of different size slits and tight control of critical parameters. For the single-slit we find very diverse samples of interference-like patterns but all causal by nature. This also holds for the double-slit. However, an extra interference effect appears here. The origin of this is investigated by blocking either the inlet or the outlet of one slit. Hereby we show that the extra interference is solely due to back-scatter of the associated wave field from the outlet of the slit not passed by the droplet. Recently Pucci et al. [J. Fluid Mech. 835, 1136 (2018)] using a much broader slit also showed that the classical system is basically causal. They, too, observed the extra interference effect for the double-slit. However, the reason behind was not determined. Moreover they claimed the existence of a chaotic regime just below the cri- tical acceleration for spontaneous generation of Faraday surface waves. Our measurements do not support the validity of this claim. However, the drop dynamics turns out to have an interesting multifaceted interaction with the slit structure.

AB - Just over a decade ago Couder and Fort [Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 154101 (2006)] published a provocative paper suggesting that a classical system might be able to simulate the truly fundamental quantum mechanical single- and double-slit experiment. The system they investigated was that of an oil droplet walking on a vibrated oil surface. Their results have since been challenged by Andersen et al. [Phys. Rev. E 92, 013006 (2015)] by pointing to insufficient statistical support and a lack of experimental control over critical parameters. Here we show that the randomness in the original experiment is an artifact of lack of control. We present experimental data from an extensive scan of the parameter space of the system including the use of different size slits and tight control of critical parameters. For the single-slit we find very diverse samples of interference-like patterns but all causal by nature. This also holds for the double-slit. However, an extra interference effect appears here. The origin of this is investigated by blocking either the inlet or the outlet of one slit. Hereby we show that the extra interference is solely due to back-scatter of the associated wave field from the outlet of the slit not passed by the droplet. Recently Pucci et al. [J. Fluid Mech. 835, 1136 (2018)] using a much broader slit also showed that the classical system is basically causal. They, too, observed the extra interference effect for the double-slit. However, the reason behind was not determined. Moreover they claimed the existence of a chaotic regime just below the cri- tical acceleration for spontaneous generation of Faraday surface waves. Our measurements do not support the validity of this claim. However, the drop dynamics turns out to have an interesting multifaceted interaction with the slit structure.

U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevE.102.023115

DO - 10.1103/PhysRevE.102.023115

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32942405

VL - 102

JO - Physical Review E

JF - Physical Review E

SN - 2470-0045

M1 - 023115

ER -

ID: 247984489