Entanglement limits duality and vice versa

Fundamentally contradictory but inescapably joined dual attributes, wave and particle, remain a conceptually unsettling element at the heart of quantum mechanics. It was a career-long unanswered challenge for Bohr to rationalize quantum duality. The conceptual dilemma it presents has remained an open issue, a topic of continued discussion, ever since. Here we report the discovery of an experimentally manageable route to control the weirdness of duality. Ironically, entanglement, the other conceptually challenging weirdness of quantum theory, will be shown to be in control of duality. We establish a simple identity through which entanglement prescribes quantitatively the degree of duality, of combined waveness and particleness, that can be recorded in any one-quantum two-path coherence experiment.