Phase Transitions in Light-Matter Systems for Quantum Sensing
Louis Garbe

TL;DR
This thesis explores exotic phase transitions in strongly coupled light-matter systems, focusing on two-photon interactions and their applications in quantum sensing and metrology, with potential for developing small-scale high-precision sensors.
Contribution
It introduces new insights into phase transitions induced by two-photon coupling and demonstrates their use in quantum sensing with finite-size systems, expanding understanding of nonclassicality and resource theories.
Findings
Finite-size systems exhibit phase transitions useful for sensing.
Two-photon coupling creates a rich phase diagram with instabilities.
Enhanced measurement precision near critical points.
Abstract
When light and matter are weakly coupled, they can be described as two distinctive systems exchanging quanta of energy. By contrast, for very large coupling strength, the systems hybridize and form compounds that cannot be described in terms of light or matter only. In this Thesis, we study some exotic properties which arise in this regime. In particular, we are interested in the possibility to engineer quantum phase transitions in these systems. One direction we explore is the study of two-photon coupling, a mechanism in which matter creates or absorb photons by pairs. This mechanism creates a rich phase diagram containing both phase transitions and instabilities. A second topic is the use of these transitions for sensing applications. Indeed, near the critical point, the system becomes extremely sensitive to external perturbations. We study a setup in which a single qubit is coupled…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum many-body systems
