Characterization of Errors in Interferometry with Entangled Atoms
Constantin Brif, Brandon P. Ruzic, Grant W. Biedermann

TL;DR
This paper analyzes various error sources in entangled atom interferometry, deriving how they affect measurement sensitivity and demonstrating that entanglement-enhanced sensing is feasible with current technology.
Contribution
The paper provides an analytic framework for understanding how specific errors impact entangled atom interferometers and assesses their feasibility with existing experimental setups.
Findings
Errors reduce parity oscillation amplitude, affecting phase sensitivity.
Analytic expressions relate error parameters to measurement degradation.
Entanglement-enhanced atom interferometry is practically feasible today.
Abstract
Recent progress in generating entangled spin states of neutral atoms provides opportunities to advance quantum sensing technology. In particular, entanglement can enhance the performance of accelerometers and gravimeters based on light-pulse atom interferometry. We study the effects of error sources that may limit the sensitivity of such devices, including errors in the preparation of the initial entangled state, imperfections in the laser pulses, momentum spread of the initial atomic wave packet, measurement errors, spontaneous emission, and atom loss. We determine that, for each of these errors, the expectation value of the parity operator has the general form, , where is the interferometer phase and is the number of atoms prepared in the maximally entangled Greenberger--Horne--Zeilinger state. Correspondingly,…
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