Continuous Measurement Quantum State Tomography of Atomic Ensembles
Carlos A. Riofr\'io

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel continuous measurement quantum tomography protocol for atomic ensembles, enabling efficient state reconstruction with high fidelity in a large 16-dimensional Hilbert space.
Contribution
It introduces a continuous measurement approach combined with maximum likelihood and compressed sensing for quantum state tomography, applied to cold cesium atoms.
Findings
Achieved >95% fidelity for low complexity states
Achieved >92% fidelity for arbitrary states
Demonstrated precise control and agreement with theory
Abstract
Quantum state tomography is a fundamental tool in quantum information processing. It allows us to estimate the state of a quantum system by measuring different observables on many identically prepared copies of the system. This is, in general, a very time-consuming task that requires a large number of measurements. There are, however, systems in which the data acquisition can be done more efficiently. In fact, an ensemble of quantum systems can be prepared and manipulated by external fields while being continuously and collectively probed, producing enough information to estimate its state. This provides a basis for continuous measurement quantum tomography. In this protocol, an ensemble of identically prepared systems is collectively probed and controlled in a time-dependent manner to create an informationally complete continuous measurement record. The measurement history is then…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Quantum Information and Cryptography
