Interaction-based quantum metrology showing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit
M. Napolitano, M. Koschorreck, B. Dubost, N. Behbood, R. J. Sewell and, M. W. Mitchell

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates super-Heisenberg scaling in quantum metrology using nonlinear interactions in an atomic ensemble, surpassing traditional limits and highlighting interactions as a new resource for enhanced measurement precision.
Contribution
It experimentally shows super-Heisenberg scaling via pairwise photon interactions, extending quantum metrology beyond the Heisenberg limit with nonlinear effects.
Findings
Achieved sensitivity scaling as N^{-3/2} using nonlinear interactions.
Observed super-Heisenberg scaling over two orders of magnitude in N.
Higher-order nonlinearities limit the scaling at large N.
Abstract
Quantum metrology studies the use of entanglement and other quantum resources to improve precision measurement. An interferometer using N independent particles to measure a parameter X can achieve at best the "standard quantum limit" (SQL) of sensitivity {\delta}X \propto N^{-1/2}. The same interferometer using N entangled particles can achieve in principle the "Heisenberg limit" {\delta}X \propto N^{-1}, using exotic states. Recent theoretical work argues that interactions among particles may be a valuable resource for quantum metrology, allowing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit. Specifically, a k-particle interaction will produce sensitivity {\delta}X \propto N^{-k} with appropriate entangled states and {\delta}X \propto N^{-(k-1/2)} even without entanglement. Here we demonstrate this "super-Heisenberg" scaling in a nonlinear, non-destructive measurement of the magnetisation of an…
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