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Observation of the quantum equivalence principle for matter-waves

Observation of the quantum equivalence principle for matter-waves
Observation of the quantum equivalence principle for matter-waves
Einstein's general theory of relativity is based on the principle of equivalence - in essence, dating back to Galileo - which asserts that, locally, the effect of a gravitational field is equivalent to that of an accelerating reference frame, so that the local gravitational field is eliminated in a freely-falling frame. Einstein's theory enables this principle to extend to a global description of relativistic space-time, at the expense of allowing space-time to become curved, realising a consistent frame-independent description of nature at the classical level. Einstein's theory has been confirmed to great accuracy for astrophysical bodies. However, in the quantum domain the equivalence principle has been predicted to take a unique form involving a gauge phase that is observable if the wavefunction - fundamental to quantum descriptions - allows an object to interfere with itself after being simultaneously at rest in two differently accelerating frames, one being the laboratory (Newtonian) frame and the other in the freely-falling (Einsteinian) frame. To measure this gauge phase we realise a novel cold-atom interferometer in which one wave packet stays static in the laboratory frame while the other is in free fall. We follow the relative-phase evolution of the wave packets in the two frames, confirming the equivalence principle in the quantum domain. Our observation is yet another fundamental test of the interface between quantum theory and gravity. The new interferometer also opens the door for further probing of the latter interface, as well as to searches for new physics.
quant-ph, cond-mat.quant-gas, gr-qc, hep-th, physics.atom-ph
arXiv
Dobkowski, Or
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Trok, Barak
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Skakunenko, Peter
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Japha, Yonathan
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Groswasser, David
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Efremov, Maxim
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Marletto, Chiara
ca74e4a7-ce16-48e5-b604-bf96856cd53e
Fuentes, Ivette
c6d65a4c-feac-44c1-9097-e0f6a9e0cf44
Penrose, Roger
0826651f-0fbe-40b6-ab90-3d2067685d6a
Vedral, Vlatko
03a75982-aa3d-48d6-a3e9-e44bf09eef83
Schleich, Wolfgang P.
e300bbb1-bd06-4f8b-b9fa-0148bf14b43d
Folman, Ron
a9581663-ea49-4fbe-b11e-7bfa9414777e
Dobkowski, Or
fad7bc50-8b95-4875-81a8-a7ae0ca999cb
Trok, Barak
639afafe-761f-47ac-88e0-5621fe73f85c
Skakunenko, Peter
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Japha, Yonathan
7192aca2-8ddb-432b-90b0-163315f76fda
Groswasser, David
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Efremov, Maxim
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Marletto, Chiara
ca74e4a7-ce16-48e5-b604-bf96856cd53e
Fuentes, Ivette
c6d65a4c-feac-44c1-9097-e0f6a9e0cf44
Penrose, Roger
0826651f-0fbe-40b6-ab90-3d2067685d6a
Vedral, Vlatko
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Schleich, Wolfgang P.
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Folman, Ron
a9581663-ea49-4fbe-b11e-7bfa9414777e

[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]

Record type: UNSPECIFIED

Abstract

Einstein's general theory of relativity is based on the principle of equivalence - in essence, dating back to Galileo - which asserts that, locally, the effect of a gravitational field is equivalent to that of an accelerating reference frame, so that the local gravitational field is eliminated in a freely-falling frame. Einstein's theory enables this principle to extend to a global description of relativistic space-time, at the expense of allowing space-time to become curved, realising a consistent frame-independent description of nature at the classical level. Einstein's theory has been confirmed to great accuracy for astrophysical bodies. However, in the quantum domain the equivalence principle has been predicted to take a unique form involving a gauge phase that is observable if the wavefunction - fundamental to quantum descriptions - allows an object to interfere with itself after being simultaneously at rest in two differently accelerating frames, one being the laboratory (Newtonian) frame and the other in the freely-falling (Einsteinian) frame. To measure this gauge phase we realise a novel cold-atom interferometer in which one wave packet stays static in the laboratory frame while the other is in free fall. We follow the relative-phase evolution of the wave packets in the two frames, confirming the equivalence principle in the quantum domain. Our observation is yet another fundamental test of the interface between quantum theory and gravity. The new interferometer also opens the door for further probing of the latter interface, as well as to searches for new physics.

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2502.14535v3 - Author's Original
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Published date: 20 February 2025
Keywords: quant-ph, cond-mat.quant-gas, gr-qc, hep-th, physics.atom-ph

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 509219
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509219
PURE UUID: 0f00ad65-583a-404c-a8b8-d37ca1e0e262
ORCID for Ivette Fuentes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7941-7815

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Date deposited: 13 Feb 2026 17:38
Last modified: 14 Feb 2026 03:02

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Contributors

Author: Or Dobkowski
Author: Barak Trok
Author: Peter Skakunenko
Author: Yonathan Japha
Author: David Groswasser
Author: Maxim Efremov
Author: Chiara Marletto
Author: Ivette Fuentes ORCID iD
Author: Roger Penrose
Author: Vlatko Vedral
Author: Wolfgang P. Schleich
Author: Ron Folman

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