Demonstration of Quantum Advantage in Microwave Quantum Radar
R\'eouven Assouly, R\'emy Dassonneville, Th\'eau Peronnin, Audrey, Bienfait, Benjamin Huard

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a microwave quantum radar that achieves a quantum advantage through joint measurement, overcoming previous limitations by using superconducting circuits and entangled states, despite experimental challenges.
Contribution
It presents the first microwave quantum radar with a verified quantum advantage using joint measurement and superconducting circuits, advancing practical quantum sensing technology.
Findings
Achieved quantum advantage Q>1 in microwave radar
Implemented joint measurement with superconducting circuits
Mitigated microwave loss impact by storing the idler
Abstract
While quantum entanglement can enhance the performance of several technologies such as computing, sensing and cryptography, its widespread use is hindered by its sensitivity to noise and losses. Interestingly, even when entanglement has been destroyed, some tasks still exhibit a quantum advantage , defined by a -time speedup, over any classical strategies. A prominent example is the quantum radar, which enhances the detection of the presence of a target in noisy surroundings. To beat all classical strategies, Lloyd proposed to use a probe initially entangled with an idler that can be recombined and measured with the reflected probe. Observing any quantum advantage requires exploiting the quantum correlations between the probe and the idler. It involves their joint measurement or at least adapting the idler detection to the outcome of the probe measurement. In addition to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
