44 research outputs found
Adaptive quantum metrology under general Markovian noise
We consider a general model of unitary parameter estimation in presence of
Markovian noise, where the parameter to be estimated is associated with the
Hamiltonian part of the dynamics. In absence of noise, unitary parameter can be
estimated with precision scaling as , where is the total probing time.
We provide a simple algebraic condition involving solely the operators
appearing in the quantum Master equation, implying at most scaling
of precision under the most general adaptive quantum estimation strategies. We
also discuss the requirements a quantum error-correction like protocol must
satisfy in order to regain the precision scaling in case the above
mentioned algebraic condition is not satisfied. Furthermore, we apply the
developed methods to understand fundamental precision limits in atomic
interferometry with many-body effects taken into account, shedding new light on
the performance of non-linear metrological models.Comment: 13 pages, see also arXiv:1706.0244
The Quantum Cocktail Party
We consider the problem of decorrelating states of coupled quantum systems.
The decorrelation can be seen as separation of quantum signals, in analogy to
the classical problem of signal-separation rising in the so-called
cocktail-party context. The separation of signals cannot be achieved perfectly,
and we analyse the optimal decorrelation map in terms of added noise in the
local separated states. Analytical results can be obtained both in the case of
two-level quantum systems and for Gaussian states of harmonic oscillators.Comment: 4 pages, 2figures, revtex
Quantum phase estimation with lossy interferometers
We give a detailed discussion of optimal quantum states for optical two-mode
interferometry in the presence of photon losses. We derive analytical formulae
for the precision of phase estimation obtainable using quantum states of light
with a definite photon number and prove that maximization of the precision is a
convex optimization problem. The corresponding optimal precision, i.e. the
lowest possible uncertainty, is shown to beat the standard quantum limit thus
outperforming classical interferometry. Furthermore, we discuss more general
inputs: states with indefinite photon number and states with photons
distributed between distinguishable time bins. We prove that neither of these
is helpful in improving phase estimation precision.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Optimal Quantum Phase Estimation
By using a systematic optimization approach we determine quantum states of
light with definite photon number leading to the best possible precision in
optical two mode interferometry. Our treatment takes into account the
experimentally relevant situation of photon losses. Our results thus reveal the
benchmark for precision in optical interferometry. Although this boundary is
generally worse than the Heisenberg limit, we show that the obtained precision
beats the standard quantum limit thus leading to a significant improvement
compared to classical interferometers. We furthermore discuss alternative
states and strategies to the optimized states which are easier to generate at
the cost of only slightly lower precision.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Replaced with final versio
Quantum-enhanced gyroscopy with rotating anisotropic Bose–Einstein condensates
High-precision gyroscopes are a key component of inertial navigation systems. By considering matter wave gyroscopes that make use of entanglement it should be possible to gain some advantages in terms of sensitivity, size, and resources used over unentangled optical systems. In this paper we consider the details of such a quantum-enhanced atom interferometry scheme based on atoms trapped in a carefully-chosen rotating trap. We consider all the steps: entanglement generation, phase imprinting, and read-out of the signal and show that quantum enhancement should be possible in principle. While the improvement in performance over equivalent unentangled schemes is small, our feasibility study opens the door to further developments and improvements
Entanglement production in Quantized Chaotic Systems
Quantum chaos is a subject whose major goal is to identify and to investigate
different quantum signatures of classical chaos. Here we study entanglement
production in coupled chaotic systems as a possible quantum indicator of
classical chaos. We use coupled kicked tops as a model for our extensive
numerical studies. We find that, in general, presence of chaos in the system
produces more entanglement. However, coupling strength between two subsystems
is also very important parameter for the entanglement production. Here we show
how chaos can lead to large entanglement which is universal and describable by
random matrix theory (RMT). We also explain entanglement production in coupled
strongly chaotic systems by deriving a formula based on RMT. This formula is
valid for arbitrary coupling strengths, as well as for sufficiently long time.
Here we investigate also the effect of chaos on the entanglement production for
the mixed initial state. We find that many properties of the mixed state
entanglement production are qualitatively similar to the pure state
entanglement production. We however still lack an analytical understanding of
the mixed state entanglement production in chaotic systems.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Pramana:Journal of Physic