281 research outputs found
Information recycling beam-splitters for atom-interferometry with enhanced sensitivity
We propose a scheme to significantly enhance the sensitivity of
atom-interferometry performed with Bose-Einstein condensates. When a two-photon
Raman transition is used to split the condensate into two modes, some
information about the number of atoms in one of the modes is transferred to one
of the optical modes. We introduce a simple model to describe this process, and
find that by processing this information in an appropriate way, the sensitivity
of atom interferometry can be enhanced by more than a factor of 10 for
realistic parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Updated to published versio
A multi-mode model of a non-classical atom laser produced by outcoupling from a Bose-Einstein condensate with squeezed light
We examine the properties of an atom laser produced by outcoupling from a
Bose-Einstein condensate with squeezed light. We introduce a method which
allows us to model the full multimode dynamics of the squeezed optical field
and the outcoupled atoms. We show that for experimentally reasonable parameters
that the quantum statistics of the optical field are almost completely
transferred to the outcoupled atoms, and investigate the robustness to the
coupling strength and the two-photon detuning.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted to Laser physics letter
Optimal and Robust Quantum Metrology Using Interaction-Based Readouts
Useful quantum metrology requires nonclassical states with a high particle
number and (close to) the optimal exploitation of the state's quantum
correlations. Unfortunately, the single-particle detection resolution demanded
by conventional protocols, such as spin squeezing via one-axis twisting, places
severe limits on the particle number. Additionally, the challenge of finding
optimal measurements (that saturate the quantum Cram{\'e}r-Rao bound) for an
arbitrary nonclassical state limits most metrological protocols to only
moderate levels of quantum enhancement. "Interaction-based readout" protocols
have been shown to allow optimal interferometry \emph{or} to provide robustness
against detection noise at the expense of optimality. In this Letter, we prove
that one has great flexibility in constructing an optimal protocol, thereby
allowing it to also be robust to detection noise. This requires the full
probability distribution of outcomes in an optimal measurement basis, which is
typically easily accessible and can be determined from specific criteria we
provide. Additionally, we quantify the robustness of several classes of
interaction-based readouts under realistic experimental constraints. We
determine that optimal \emph{and} robust quantum metrology is achievable in
current spin-squeezing experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Generating controllable atom-light entanglement with a Raman atom laser system
We introduce a scheme for creating continuous variable entanglement between
an atomic beam and an optical field, by using squeezed light to outcouple atoms
from a BEC via a Raman transition. We model the full multimode dynamics of the
atom laser beam and the squeezed optical field, and show that with appropriate
two-photon detuning and two-photon Rabi frequency, the transmitted light is
entangled in amplitude and phase with the outcoupled atom laser beam. The
degree of entanglement is controllable via changes in the two-photon Rabi
frequency of the outcoupling process.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Stability of continuously pumped atom lasers
A multimode model of a continuously pumped atom laser is shown to be unstable
below a critical value of the scattering length. Above the critical scattering
length, the atom laser reaches a steady state, the stability of which increases
with pumping. Below this limit the laser does not reach a steady state. This
instability results from the competition between gain and loss for the excited
states of the lasing mode. It will determine a fundamental limit for the
linewidth of an atom laser beam.Comment: 4 page
Quantum metrology with mixed states: when recovering lost information is better than never losing it
Quantum-enhanced metrology can be achieved by entangling a probe with an auxiliary system, passing the probe through an interferometer, and subsequently making measurements on both the probe and auxiliary system. Conceptually, this corresponds to performing metrology with the purification of a (mixed) probe state. We demonstrate via the quantum Fisher information how to design mixed states whose purifications are an excellent metrological resource. In particular, we give examples of mixed states with purifications that allow (near) Heisenberg-limited metrology and provide examples of entangling Hamiltonians that can generate these states. Finally, we present the optimal measurement and parameter-estimation procedure required to realize these sensitivities (i.e., that saturate the quantum Cramér-Rao bound). Since pure states of comparable metrological usefulness are typically challenging to generate, it may prove easier to use this approach of entanglement and measurement of an auxiliary system. An example where this may be the case is atom interferometry, where entanglement with optical systems is potentially easier to engineer than the atomic interactions required to produce nonclassical atomic states
Improving cold-atom sensors with quantum entanglement: Prospects and challenges
Quantum entanglement has been generated and verified in cold-atom experiments
and used to make atom-interferometric measurements below the shot-noise limit.
However, current state-of-the-art cold-atom devices exploit separable (i.e.
unentangled) atomic states. This Perspective piece asks the question: can
entanglement usefully improve cold-atom sensors, in the sense that it gives new
sensing capabilities unachievable with current state-of-the-art devices? We
briefly review the state-of-the-art in precision cold-atom sensing, focussing
on clocks and inertial sensors, identifying the potential benefits entanglement
could bring to these devices, and the challenges that need to be overcome to
realize these benefits. We survey demonstrated methods of generating
metrologically-useful entanglement in cold-atom systems, note their relative
strengths and weaknesses, and assess their prospects for near-to-medium term
quantum-enhanced cold-atom sensing.Comment: Invited perspective; close to published version. Note the change in
title. 19 pages, 7 figure
Outcoupling from a Bose-Einstein condensate with squeezed light to produce entangled atom laser beams
We examine the properties of an atom laser produced by outcoupling from a
Bose-Einstein condensate with squeezed light. We model the multimode dynamics
of the output field and show that a significant amount of squeezing can be
transfered from an optical mode to a propagating atom laser beam. We use this
to demonstrate that two-mode squeezing can be used to produce twin atom laser
beams with continuous variable entanglement in amplitude and phase.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
Surpassing the Standard Quantum Limit in an Atom Interferometer with Four-mode Entanglement Produced from Four-Wave Mixing
We theoretically investigate a scheme for atom interferometry that surpasses
the standard quantum limit. A four-wave mixing scheme similar to the recent
experiment performed by Pertot et al. \cite{pertot} is used to generate
sub-shot noise correlations between two modes. These two modes are then
interfered with the remaining two modes in such a way as to surpass the
standard quantum limit, whilst utilising all of the available atoms. Our scheme
can be viewed as using two correlated interferometers. That is, the signal from
each interferometer when looked at individually is classical, but there are
correlations between the two interferometers that allow for the standard
quantum limit to be surpassed.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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