Indefinite Time Directed Quantum Metrology
Gaurang Agrawal, Pritam Halder, Aditi Sen De

TL;DR
This paper introduces indefinite time directed quantum metrology (ITDM), demonstrating that it can achieve Heisenberg scaling in parameter estimation, with product states often outperforming entangled states, and shows advantages in noisy environments.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel ITDM protocol that surpasses standard limits, proves the optimality of product states, and offers practical measurement strategies for enhanced quantum metrology.
Findings
Achieves Heisenberg scaling with product states
Entangled states do not improve scaling in ITDM
ITDM outperforms existing methods in noisy conditions
Abstract
We explore the performance of the metrology scheme by employing a quantum time flip during encoding, a specific case of processes with indefinite time direction, which we refer to as indefinite time directed metrology (ITDM). In the case of single parameter estimation of a unitary, we demonstrate that our protocol can achieve Heisenberg scaling (1/N) with product probe states, surpassing the standard quantum limit (1/\sqrt{N}), where N is the number of particles in the probe. We establish this by computing the quantum Fisher information (QFI) which is a lower bound on the root mean square error occurred during parameter estimation. Although we analytically prove the optimality of the symmetric product probe state in ITDM, entangled probe states produce a higher QFI than optimal product probes without enhancing scaling, highlighting the non-essentiality of entanglement. For phase…
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