Optimal metrology with programmable quantum sensors
Christian D. Marciniak, Thomas Feldker, Ivan Pogorelov, Raphael, Kaubruegger, Denis V. Vasilyev, Rick van Bijnen, Philipp Schindler, Peter, Zoller, Rainer Blatt, and Thomas Monz

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a programmable quantum sensor using entanglement and quantum circuits on trapped ions, achieving near-fundamental precision limits and outperforming traditional methods, with adaptive self-calibration capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining quantum information processing with metrology to implement near-optimal, programmable quantum sensors that self-calibrate and outperform classical techniques.
Findings
Achieved sensing close to quantum limits with 26 ions.
Outperformed conventional spin-squeezing by a factor of 1.87.
Reduced measurement averages by a factor of 1.59.
Abstract
Quantum sensors are an established technology that has created new opportunities for precision sensing across the breadth of science. Using entanglement for quantum-enhancement will allow us to construct the next generation of sensors that can approach the fundamental limits of precision allowed by quantum physics. However, determining how state-of-the-art sensing platforms may be used to converge to these ultimate limits is an outstanding challenge. In this work we merge concepts from the field of quantum information processing with metrology, and successfully implement experimentally a *programmable quantum sensor* operating close to the fundamental limits imposed by the laws of quantum mechanics. We achieve this by using low-depth, parametrized quantum circuits implementing optimal input states and measurement operators for a sensing task on a trapped ion experiment. With 26 ions, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
