Generating a 4-photon Tetrahedron State: Towards Simultaneous Super-sensitivity to Non-commuting Rotations
Hugo Ferretti, Y. Batuhan Yilmaz, Kent Bonsma-Fisher, Aaron Z., Goldberg, Noah Lupu-Gladstein, Arthur O. T. Pang, Lee A. Rozema, Aephraim M., Steinberg

TL;DR
This paper reports the experimental creation of a four-photon tetrahedron quantum state that is equally sensitive to all rotation axes, enabling simultaneous multi-parameter rotation estimation with potential advantages over existing methods.
Contribution
The authors experimentally generate and characterize the lowest-dimensional tetrahedron state in a four-photon system, demonstrating its symmetric sensitivity to rotations around any axis.
Findings
Successfully created a four-photon tetrahedron state with tetrahedral symmetry.
Demonstrated the state's potential for simultaneous estimation of multiple rotation parameters.
Hardware imperfections limit current performance, but future improvements could surpass existing strategies.
Abstract
It is often thought that the super-sensitivity of a quantum state to an observable comes at the cost of a decreased sensitivity to other non-commuting observables. For example, a squeezed state squeezed in position quadrature is super-sensitive to position displacements, but very insensitive to momentum displacements. This misconception was cleared with the introduction of the compass state, a quantum state equally super-sensitive to displacements in position and momentum. When looking at quantum states used to measure spin rotations, N00N states are known to be more advantageous than classical methods as long as they are aligned to the rotation axis. When considering the estimation of a rotation with unknown direction and amplitude, a certain class of states stands out with interesting properties. These states are equally sensitive to rotations around any axis, are second-order…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
