Precision bounds in noisy quantum metrology
Jan Kolodynski

TL;DR
This paper investigates how noise affects quantum metrology's precision, showing that even minimal decoherence limits the advantage over classical methods to a constant factor, especially for large systems.
Contribution
It introduces general techniques to quantify precision bounds in noisy quantum metrology, linking the quantum channel's geometry to achievable enhancements.
Findings
Noise restricts quantum advantage to a constant factor at large N.
Bounds are often achievable with current experimental techniques.
Decoherence significantly alters optimal states and measurements for large systems.
Abstract
In an idealistic setting, quantum metrology protocols allow to sense physical parameters with mean squared error that scales as with the number of particles involved---substantially surpassing the -scaling characteristic to classical statistics. A natural question arises, whether such an impressive enhancement persists when one takes into account the decoherence effects that are unavoidable in any real-life implementation. In this thesis, we resolve a major part of this issue by describing general techniques that allow to quantify the attainable precision in metrological schemes in the presence of uncorrelated noise. We show that the abstract geometrical structure of a quantum channel describing the noisy evolution of a single particle dictates then critical bounds on the ultimate quantum enhancement. Our results prove that an infinitesimal amount of noise is enough to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
