We describe an experiment that strongly supports a two-path interferometric
model in which the spin-up and spin-down components of each neutron propagate
coherently along spatially separated parallel paths in a typical neutron spin
echo small angle scattering (SESANS) experiment. Specifically, we show that the
usual semi-classical, single-path treatment of the Larmor precession of a
polarized neutron in an external magnetic field predicts a damping as a
function of the spin-echo length of the SESANS signal obtained with a periodic
phase grating when the transverse width of the neutron wave packet is finite.
However, no such damping is observed experimentally, implying either that the
Larmor model is incorrect or that the transverse extent of the wave packet is
very large. In contrast, we demonstrate theoretically that a quantum-mechanical
interferometric model in which the two mode-entangled (i.e. intraparticle
entangled) spin states of a single neutron are separated in space when they
interact with the grating accurately predicts the measured SESANS signal, which
is independent of the wave packet width