Display options
Share it on

Microscopy (Oxf). 2013 Jun;62:S119-29. doi: 10.1093/jmicro/dft012. Epub 2013 Apr 02.

Two-electron interference in a coherent beam.

Microscopy (Oxford, England)

Tetsuji Kodama, Nobuyuki Osakabe

Affiliations

  1. Faculty of Science and Technology, Meijo University, Nagoya 468-8502, Japan. [email protected]

PMID: 23549452 DOI: 10.1093/jmicro/dft012

Abstract

The interference between quantum amplitude for two electrons, emitted from two source points, to be detected at two detection points, is a direct result of quantum exchange statistics. Such interference is observed in the coincidence probability, compared with that of statistically independent electrons, by computing the time correlation function from the arrival times of the electrons. When the two detectors are separated by a distance less than the coherence length, the coincidence probability is suppressed for electrons (antibunching) due to the Pauli principle, even though they do not interact with each other. However, electrons are charged particles. The Coulomb potential, which governs the scattering of one charged particle by another, is so long ranged. It is obvious that we must consider the Pauli principle and the Coulomb interactions simultaneously. This paper deals with basic experimental and theoretical investigations of the antibunching behavior of electrons in a free beam by considering the Pauli principle and the direct Coulomb interaction between two individual electrons. The experimentally found dependences are described in a model which considers the Coulomb scattering and theoretical values of correlation signals evaluated by analytical calculations agree with those determined by experiment. A study of the time correlation function from the arrival times of the electrons will lead to an understanding of the physical processes that take place in electron guns.

Keywords: Coulomb scattering; Pauli principle; correlation spectroscopy; electron interferometry

Publication Types