Optimizing one-axis twists for variational Bayesian quantum metrology
Tyler G. Thurtell, Akimasa Miyake

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new variational quantum metrology approach using arbitrary-axis twist protocols, which reduces the number of twists needed and enhances estimation accuracy, even under realistic noise conditions.
Contribution
It proposes a novel family of parametrized encoding and decoding protocols called arbitrary-axis twist ansatzes, improving efficiency and robustness in quantum metrology.
Findings
Reduction in the number of one-axis twists for target accuracy.
Faster decrease of estimation error with system size compared to classical protocols.
Quantum advantage persists under realistic noise levels with few twists.
Abstract
Quantum metrology and sensing seek advantage in estimating an unknown parameter of some quantum state or channel, using entanglement such as spin squeezing produced by one-axis twists or other quantum resources. In particular, qubit phase estimation, or rotation sensing, appears as a ubiquitous problem with applications to electric field sensing, magnetometry, atomic clocks, and gyroscopes. By adopting the Bayesian formalism to the phase estimation problem to account for limited initial knowledge about the value of the phase, we formulate variational metrology and treat the state preparation (or encoding) and measurement (or decoding) procedures as parameterized quantum circuits. It is important to understand how effective various parametrized protocols are as well as how robust they are to the effects of complex noise such as spatially correlated noise. First, we propose a new family…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
