Heisenberg Limit beyond Quantum Fisher Information
Wojciech G\'orecki

TL;DR
This paper develops new bounds on quantum measurement precision beyond quantum Fisher information, especially for single-shot experiments, and explores multi-parameter quantum metrology, revealing potential advantages of simultaneous measurements.
Contribution
It introduces asymptotically saturable bounds on estimation precision using Bayesian and minimax approaches, surpassing QFI limitations, and analyzes multi-parameter measurement strategies.
Findings
Final measurement uncertainty is π times larger than QFI-based estimates under resource constraints.
New bounds are asymptotically saturable and converge with increasing resources.
Simultaneous multi-parameter measurements can offer advantages over independent measurements.
Abstract
The Heisenberg limit provides a fundamental bound on the achievable estimation precision with a limited number of resources used (e.g., atoms, photons, etc.). Using entangled quantum states makes it possible to scale the precision with better than when resources would be used independently. Consequently, the optimal use of all resources involves accumulating them in a single execution of the experiment. Unfortunately, that implies that the most common theoretical tool used to analyze metrological protocols - quantum Fisher information (QFI) - does not allow for a reliable description of this problem, as it becomes operationally meaningful only with multiple repetitions of the experiment. In this thesis, using the formalism of Bayesian estimation and the minimax estimator, I derive asymptotically saturable bounds on the precision of the estimation for the case of noiseless…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Statistical Mechanics and Entropy
