From spin squeezing to fast state discrimination
Michael R. Geller

TL;DR
This paper explores the large N limit of spin-squeezed states in Bose-Einstein condensates, linking nonlinear quantum dynamics to advanced state discrimination and quantum computation applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to quantum state discrimination using large N spin dynamics and connects spin squeezing to nonlinear quantum gates in condensates.
Findings
Large N limit shrinks initial coherent state to zero area.
Nonlinear evolution enables single-input quantum state discrimination.
Open-system analysis suggests autonomous state discrimination via basins of attraction.
Abstract
There is great interest in generating and controlling entanglement in Bose-Einstein condensates and similar ensembles for use in quantum computation, simulation, and sensing. One class of entangled states useful for enhanced metrology are spin-squeezed states of two-level atoms. After preparing a spin coherent state of width centered at coordinates on the Bloch sphere, atomic interactions generate a nonlinear evolution that shears the state's probability density, stretching it to an ellipse and causing squeezing in a direction perpendicular to the major axis. Here we consider the same setup but in the limit . This shrinks the initial coherent state to zero area. Large also suppresses two-particle entanglement and squeezing, as required by a monogamy bound. The torsion (1-axis twist) is still present, however, and the center…
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