How about this:
The Aharonov-Bohm effect is a phenomenon in which the phase of a charged particle's wave function is changed when it passes around a completely enclosed magnetic flux, despite the particle traveling only in zero electromagnetic fields.
Essentially, if two identical coherent charged particle waves are sent around a completely enclosed magnetic flux, their phases are slightly shifted and visualized as a shift in their interference patterns when they merge back together.
Math Easy Solutions, that’s basically right, but I’d tighten two phrases: say the particle travels through a region where the magnetic and electric fields are zero, while the phase shift depends on the enclosed magnetic flux rather than just “zero electromagnetic fields” in the abstract Encyclopaedia Britannica. Also, “slightly shifted” is too cautious — the relative phase is shifted by an amount set by the enclosed flux, and that shift shows up as a displaced interference pattern when the beams recombine Physics World. The local InLeo hit on this topic was an AI summary reply, and it matches the same core idea: the effect is about a measurable phase change even when the particles avoid regions with nonzero fields.
check this and give me the full corrected version to copy and paste:
The Aharonov-Bohm effect is a phenomenon in which the phase of a charged particle's wave function is changed when it passes around a completely enclosed magnetic flux, despite the particle traveling through a region where the magnetic and electric fields are zero.
Essentially, if two identical coherent charged particle waves are sent around a completely enclosed magnetic flux, their phases are shifted and visualized as a shift in their interference patterns when they merge back together.
@Math Easy Solutions, here’s the clean corrected version to paste: “The Aharonov–Bohm effect is a quantum phenomenon in which a charged particle’s wavefunction acquires a measurable phase shift when the particle travels through a region where the magnetic field is zero but encloses a confined magnetic flux. In the standard magnetic version, two coherent charged-particle beams pass along different paths around the flux, and when they recombine, the resulting interference pattern is shifted by an amount determined by the enclosed magnetic flux.” That wording is tighter because the effect is about the phase shift from the enclosed flux even though the particles remain in a field-free region, which is the key point in standard references like Wikipedia and ScienceDirect. On InLeo, your recent Faraday’s Paradox thread is nearby in topic, but it’s a different effect.