Quantum-enhanced radiometry via approximate quantum error correction
W. Wang, Z.-J. Chen, X. Liu, W. Cai, Y. Ma, X. Mu, L. Hu, Y. Xu, H., Wang, Y. P. Song, X.-B. Zou, C.-L. Zou, L. Sun

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a practical quantum-enhanced radiometry technique using approximate quantum error correction with bosonic probes, achieving significant sensitivity improvements despite experimental challenges.
Contribution
It introduces an experimental approach combining approximate QEC and quantum jump tracking to enhance sensing with bosonic modes, overcoming previous implementation barriers.
Findings
Achieved 5.3 dB sensitivity enhancement in radiometry.
Reached a sensitivity of 9.1×10^{-4} Hz^{-1/2} in measuring excitation population.
Showed potential of near-term quantum technologies for practical quantum sensing.
Abstract
By exploiting the exotic quantum states of a probe, it is possible to realize efficient sensors that are attractive for practical metrology applications and fundamental studies. Similar to other quantum technologies, quantum sensing is suffering from noises and thus the experimental developments are hindered. Although theoretical schemes based on quantum error correction (QEC) have been proposed to combat noises, their demonstrations are prevented by the stringent experimental requirements, such as perfect quantum operations and the orthogonal condition between the sensing interaction Hamiltonian and the noise Lindbladians. Here, we report an experimental demonstration of a quantum enhancement in sensing with a bosonic probe with different encodings, by exploring the large Hilbert space of the bosonic mode and developing both the approximate QEC and the quantum jump tracking approaches.…
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