Achieving Heisenberg scaling by probe-ancilla interaction in quantum metrology
Jingyi Fan, Shengshi Pang

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that interactions between probes and an ancillary system can achieve Heisenberg-limited precision in quantum metrology without entanglement, through optimized measurement schemes and system parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a protocol leveraging probe-ancilla interactions and local measurements to surpass standard quantum limits without entanglement, optimizing quantum Fisher information.
Findings
Achieves Heisenberg scaling with product states and local measurements.
Identifies optimal measurement times based on quantum Fisher information patterns.
Analyzes noise effects on the proposed quantum metrology protocol.
Abstract
The Heisenberg scaling is an ultimate precision limit of parameter estimation allowed by the principles of quantum mechanics, with no counterpart in the classical realm, and has been a long-pursued goal in quantum metrology. It has been known that interactions between the probes can help reach the Heisenberg scaling without entanglement. In this paper, we show that interactions between the probes and the additional dimensions of an ancillary system may also increase the precision of parameter estimation to surpass the standard quantum limit and attain the Heisenberg scaling without entanglement, if the measurement scheme is properly designed. The quantum Fisher information exhibits periodic patterns over the evolution time, implying the existence of optimal time points for measurements that can maximize the quantum Fisher information. By implementing optimizations over the Hamiltonian,…
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