From Unitary Propagation to Interference Suppression
2026-01-28
One-Sentence Summary. Which-way detection alters double-slit interference deterministically through interaction-induced phase evolution, without collapse, observers, or stochastic dynamics.
Abstract. We present a first-principles, deterministic account of the quantum double-slit experiment with which-way detectors. Detectors are modeled as physical circuits possessing energetic barriers and therefore necessarily introduce localized interaction potentials. These interactions modify the action of electron paths and rotate the relative phase of each path. The continuous transition from interference to its suppression follows solely from unitary propagation. All probabilistic outcomes arise only from the quadratic mapping of the propagated state after propagation.
Keywords. quantum mechanics, double-slit experiment, which-way detection, determinism, propagator, path integral, phase evolution
Quantum mechanics is probabilistic only at the level of outcome statistics. The dynamical evolution of the quantum state, as governed by the Schrödinger equation, is deterministic. This statement is independent of interpretational preferences and concerns only the propagation of the quantum state.
Determinism of evolution is not a question.
The evolution of a quantum state is governed
deterministically by the Schrödinger equation
This evolution is fully determined by the Hamiltonian —comprising the
kinetic term and the interaction potentials — together with
the quantum state
. No other consideration
is necessary at the level of propagation to calculate the probabilities
at the screen.
In the present context, the Hamiltonian is not an independent or abstract object. It is a compact representation of the interaction structure of the system. All terms in the Hamiltonian arise from physical interactions between the electron and its environment (including the detectors as part of the environment).
In the absence of detectors, the Hamiltonian reduces to free propagation or to interaction potentials common to all paths, which do not affect relative phases.
When detectors are present, additional slit-dependent interaction potentials are introduced, modifying the Hamiltonian accordingly.
An equivalent formulation is provided by the propagator. The
wavefunction at a spacetime point is obtained by the
action of the propagator on the initial state,
where the propagator, , is given by the path integral
with action
The propagator contains the full dynamical content of the theory; all interaction effects enter through its phase. Quantum mechanics is deterministic at the level of propagation; probabilities arise only from the quadratic map applied to the propagated state,
An electron quantum wave, , propagates from a source
to a screen through two slits.
In the absence of detectors, the propagation is governed by a single
propagator , corresponding to free propagation or
to interaction potentials common to all paths.
The wavefunction at the screen point is obtained by propagating the initial
state through the two available spatial channels, “left slit” and “right
slit”,
where
Here denotes the
restriction of the propagator to trajectories passing through slit
. In what follows, the slits are labeled
by
.
Since “by construction” there is no distinction is between the slits, the propagator is identical for both path classes.
The probability density at the screen is therefore
The interference term arises from coherent phase relations generated by the common propagator acting on the two spatially distinct path families.
A detector is not an abstract “observer”. It is a physical device, a circuit of some kind.
By definition, a detector:
is a circuit with at least two metastable macroscopic states (“triggered” and “not triggered”);
contains an energetic barrier separating those states;
and therefore requires an energy transfer to cross that barrier and register a detection event.
Consequently, the presence of a detector near a slit necessarily introduces a localized interaction between the electron and the detector’s activation circuit, independent of whether a macroscopic click ultimately occurs.
From the electron’s perspective, a detector defines a spatial region
in which the
electron may interact with the detector through an interaction potential
, capable of deterministically
triggering when an energetic threshold is crossed.
Within the region , the detector is
capable of coupling to the particle and contributing an interaction term
to the action. This interaction produces an energetic imprint in the
phase of the propagated wavefunction and therefore affects the
probability density
, regardless of
the final macroscopic state of the detector.
When detectors are placed near the slits, the electron propagates in the presence of an enlarged interaction environment. It is important to emphasize that the electron does not interact with only one detector or the other. Along all trajectories, the electron interacts with the full detector environment.
Accordingly, the Hamiltonian contains interaction terms associated
with both detectors, described by localized interaction potentials and
. These potentials
are present for all paths; what distinguishes the two slit contributions
is not the presence or absence of an interaction, but the relative
weight with which these interaction potentials contribute along
different classes of trajectories.
In propagator language, the wavefunction at the screen point is written as
with each contribution obtained by propagating the initial state through the corresponding spatial channel,
The restricted propagators can be expressed as
where the functional integral is restricted to trajectories belonging
to slit-class . The interaction potentials
and
are present for all paths; what
distinguishes the two classes is the relative contribution of these
potentials along the corresponding trajectories.
The physically relevant quantity controlling interference is the
action difference between the two slit contributions, which defines the
relative phase :
Define the action increment associated with each detector interaction:
Only differences between these increments affect interference. The relative phase is
The total amplitude is therefore
Here the superscript in
denotes
the reference amplitude computed for free propagation, or equivalently
for symmetric interactions that do not produce a relative phase.
The probability density of finding the electron
in some point in the screen calculated as:
so
The last two terms are complex conjugates, hence
If , then
and
therefore
which is precisely the full double-slit interference expression.
Recall the expression for the probability density to detect the electron at
position
on the screen:
The probability density at a point on the screen depends on the
relative phase through the rotation factor
.
That is, the mere presence of a detector modifies the probability distribution not by recording an outcome, but by altering the phase structure of the propagated amplitudes.
When the two slits are energetically symmetric, such that , the phase
difference vanishes,
, and
the interference term contributes maximally. In this case the familiar
double-slit pattern is recovered. The visibility of the interference
pattern therefore directly reflects the symmetry of the slit
interactions.
When a detector is present near one or both slits, the corresponding
interaction potentials generally differ, . The
resulting phase difference modifies the interference term and alters the
probability distribution at the screen. This effect occurs independently
of whether the detector ultimately triggers.
To make the “triggers / does-not-trigger” point explicit, introduce a
detector outcome variable for
slit
, where
denotes a macroscopic
firing event and
denotes no firing.
Crucially, the interaction potential
is present in the Hamiltonian
independently of the value of
;
labels a detector outcome, not the
existence of an interaction.
Accordingly, the screen amplitude must be written as an amplitude conditioned on detector outcomes. In the simplest which-way arrangement (exactly one slit is correlated with exactly one detector), the joint amplitude takes the form
where is the Kronecker
delta.
The expression describes a superposition of two propagation channels:
the slit-1 contribution correlated with the detector-outcome channel
,
and the slit-2 contribution correlated with
.
The quantum wave functions and
correspond to
the propagated waves computed at the screen, in position
, with the interaction potentials,
and
included in the action delta,
.
If one does not condition on the detector outcomes, the observed
probability at the screen is obtained by summing explicitly over all
detector outcomes :
For typical which-way arrangements , only the outcomes and
contribute, with
while
Therefore,
The cross term is
absent because the two slit contributions occupy orthogonal
detector-outcome channels (classically either one detector fires,
none or both cases are not typically
considered).
This absence is independent of whether a detector fires; it follows from summing over distinct outcomes rather than conditioning on one.
No interference term appears in this unconditional probability,
because the two slit contributions occupy disjoint detector-outcome
channels and
.
This shows explicitly that the disappearance of interference is a
deterministic consequence of the interaction potentials associated with
the detectors. The interaction potentials are present during propagation
regardless of whether a macroscopic firing event occurs.
The above Kronecker-delta form represents an idealized which-way detector with perfect efficiency and exclusive triggering. In general, non-ideal detector response permits additional outcome channels. The most general two-slit form can be written as
where
is the detector response amplitude for outcome
conditioned on
the slit-class
.
Summing over outcomes yields
Thus the interference term is controlled by the overlap factor
Ideal which-way detection corresponds to (distinct outcome
channels); full interference corresponds to
(indistinguishable detector response).
The mechanistic view of detectors as energetic thresholds opens the posibility of both detectors firing and the electron be found in the screen.
If both detectors fire, the corresponding detector response implies that the interaction experienced by the wave was effectively symmetric between the two slit regions. In such a case, the relative phase difference vanishes and the double-slit interference pattern is recovered.
Similarly, if neither detector fires and the electron is nevertheless detected at the screen, the wavefunction must have evolved under the combined detector potential into a configuration with negligible amplitude in the detector regions. This evolution again corresponds to an effectively symmetric interaction and therefore permits interference.
Detector outcomes label macroscopic response channels of the detector
apparatus; they do not identify microscopic trajectories. In particular,
outcomes such as or
reflect how the
detector circuitry responds to the incident wave, not where the electron
“was” in a particle sense.
When both detectors fire, the interaction potentials have coupled to wave amplitude in both slit regions.
It is instructive to note that, because the detector interaction
potentials are spatially extended and possess nontrivial spatial
structure, the Schrödinger equation admits solutions in which the
electron wavefunction is strongly suppressed —potentially vanishing—
within the detector regions while remaining finite at the screen. This
behavior arises from wave interference under the combined potential and does not rely
on penetration of a classically forbidden region.
Transmission to the screen without detector triggering is therefore a purely wave-mechanical, deterministic effect. It reflects the fact that a wave —quantum or electromagnetic— is defined over all allowed space and can develop nodal or near-nodal regions as a consequence of its interaction with structured potentials.
At no stage does the description require:
The electron evolves deterministically under unitary propagation. Probabilities arise only after applying the quadratic map to the propagated state.
The disappearance of interference is a consequence of deterministic phase evolution under interaction. Nothing else is required.
We have shown that, by following the deterministic evolution of an electron traversing a double slit in the presence of which-way detectors, one can recover continuously either the double-slit or the single-slit interference pattern without appealing to observers, information-theoretic notions, or quantum mysticism.
By treating the quantum wave as a literal wave evolving under electromagnetic interaction potentials, we also uncover clear mechanistic explanations for phenomena commonly described using tunneling or nonlocal transfer language. Such effects arise from global wave propagation and interference under structured interactions, and do not require stochastic jumps, collapse, or special postulates beyond unitary quantum dynamics.
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