91 research outputs found

    Entanglement and sensitivity in precision measurements with states of a fluctuating number of particles

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    The concepts of separability, entanglement, spin-squeezing and Heisenberg limit are central in the theory of quantum enhanced metrology. In the current literature, these are well established only in the case of linear interferometers operating with input quantum states of a known fixed number of particles. This manuscript generalizes these concepts and extends the quantum phase estimation theory by taking into account classical and quantum fluctuations of the particle number. Our analysis concerns most of the current experiments on precision measurements where the number of particles is known only in average.Comment: Published versio

    Non-Linear Beam Splitter in Bose-Einstein Condensate Interferometers

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    A beam splitter is an important component of an atomic/optical Mach-Zehnder interferometer. Here we study a Bose Einstein Condensate beam splitter, realized with a double well potential of tunable height. We analyze how the sensitivity of a Mach Zehnder interferometer is degraded by the non-linear particle-particle interaction during the splitting dynamics. We distinguish three regimes, Rabi, Josephson and Fock, and associate to them a different scaling of the phase sensitivity with the total number of particles.Comment: draft, 19 pages, 10 figure

    Localized and extended states in a disordered trap

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    We study Anderson localization in a disordered potential combined with an inhomogeneous trap. We show that the spectrum displays both localized and extended states, which coexist at intermediate energies. In the region of coexistence, we find that the extended states result from confinement by the trap and are weakly affected by the disorder. Conversely, the localized states correspond to eigenstates of the disordered potential, which are only affected by the trap via an inhomogeneous energy shift. These results are relevant to disordered quantum gases and we propose a realistic scheme to observe the coexistence of localized and extended states in these systems.Comment: Published versio

    Quantum metrology at the Heisenberg limit with ion traps

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    Sub-Planck phase-space structures in the Wigner function of the motional degree of freedom of a trapped ion can be used to perform weak force measurements with Heisenberg-limited sensitivity. We propose methods to engineer the Hamiltonian of the trapped ion to generate states with such small scale structures, and we show how to use them in quantum metrology applications.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure

    Sub Shot-Noise Phase Sensitivity with a Bose-Einstein Condensate Mach-Zehnder Interferometer

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    Bose Einstein Condensates, with their coherence properties, have attracted wide interest for their possible application to ultra precise interferometry and ultra weak force sensors. Since condensates, unlike photons, are interacting, they may permit the realization of specific quantum states needed as input of an interferometer to approach the Heisenberg limit, the supposed lower bound to precision phase measurements. To this end, we study the sensitivity to external weak perturbations of a representative matter-wave Mach-Zehnder interferometer whose input are two Bose-Einstein condensates created by splitting a single condensate in two parts. The interferometric phase sensitivity depends on the specific quantum state created with the two condensates, and, therefore, on the time scale of the splitting process. We identify three different regimes, characterized by a phase sensitivity Δξ\Delta \theta scaling with the total number of condensate particles NN as i) the standard quantum limit ΔΞ∌1/N1/2\Delta \theta \sim 1/N^{1/2}, ii) the sub shot-noise ΔΞ∌1/N3/4\Delta \theta \sim 1/N^{3/4} and the iii) the Heisenberg limit ΔΞ∌1/N\Delta \theta \sim 1/N. However, in a realistic dynamical BEC splitting, the 1/N limit requires a long adiabaticity time scale, which is hardly reachable experimentally. On the other hand, the sub shot-noise sensitivity ΔΞ∌1/N3/4\Delta \theta \sim 1/N^{3/4} can be reached in a realistic experimental setting. We also show that the 1/N3/41/N^{3/4} scaling is a rigorous upper bound in the limit N→∞N \to \infty, while keeping constant all different parameters of the bosonic Mach-Zehnder interferometer.Comment: 4 figure

    Phase detection at the quantum limit with multi-photon Mach-Zehnder interferometry

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    We study a Mach-Zehnder interferometer fed by a coherent state in one input port and vacuum in the other. We explore a Bayesian phase estimation strategy to demonstrate that it is possible to achieve the standard quantum limit independently from the true value of the phase shift and specific assumptions on the noise of the interferometer. We have been able to implement the protocol using parallel operation of two photon-number-resolving detectors and multiphoton coincidence logic electronics at the output ports of a weakly-illuminated Mach-Zehnder interferometer. This protocol is unbiased and saturates the Cramer-Rao phase uncertainty bound and, therefore, is an optimal phase estimation strategy.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures replaced fig. 1 to correct graphics bu

    Mach-Zehnder Interferometry at the Heisenberg Limit with coherent and squeezed-vacuum light

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    We show that the phase sensitivity Δξ\Delta \theta of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer fed by a coherent state in one input port and squeezed-vacuum in the other one is i) independent from the true value of the phase shift and ii) can reach the Heisenberg limit ΔΞ∌1/NT\Delta \theta \sim 1/N_T, where NTN_T is the average number of particles of the input states. We also show that the Cramer-Rao lower bound, Δξ∝1/∣α∣2e2r+sinh⁥2r\Delta \theta \propto 1/ \sqrt{|\alpha|^2 e^{2r} + \sinh^2r}, can be saturated for arbitrary values of the squeezing parameter rr and the amplitude of the coherent mode ∣α∣|\alpha| by a Bayesian phase inference protocol.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Anisotropic 2D diffusive expansion of ultra-cold atoms in a disordered potential

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    We study the horizontal expansion of vertically confined ultra-cold atoms in the presence of disorder. Vertical confinement allows us to realize a situation with a few coupled harmonic oscillator quantum states. The disordered potential is created by an optical speckle at an angle of 30{\deg} with respect to the horizontal plane, resulting in an effective anisotropy of the correlation lengths of a factor of 2 in that plane. We observe diffusion leading to non-Gaussian density profiles. Diffusion coefficients, extracted from the experimental results, show anisotropy and strong energy dependence, in agreement with numerical calculations

    Double-Slit Interferometry with a Bose-Einstein Condensate

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    A Bose-Einstein "double-slit" interferometer has been recently realized experimentally by (Y. Shin et. al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 92 50405 (2004)). We analyze the interferometric steps by solving numerically the time-dependent Gross-Pitaevski equation in three-dimensional space. We focus on the adiabaticity time scales of the problem and on the creation of spurious collective excitations as a possible source of the strong dephasing observed experimentally. The role of quantum fluctuations is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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