Line search by quantum logic spectroscopy enhanced with squeezing and statistical tests
Ivan Vybornyi, Shuying Chen, Lukas J. Spie{\ss}, Piet O. Schmidt, Klemens Hammerer

TL;DR
This paper enhances quantum logic spectroscopy for ion and molecule transition searches by combining squeezed motional states and statistical tests, significantly increasing search speed and sensitivity.
Contribution
It introduces the combined use of squeezing and statistical hypothesis testing to improve the efficiency of frequency searches in quantum logic spectroscopy.
Findings
Squeezed motional states boost displacement detection sensitivity.
Optimal statistical postprocessing enhances data analysis.
Combined methods increase search speed by an order of magnitude.
Abstract
In quantum logic spectroscopy, internal transitions of trapped ions and molecules can be probed by measuring the motional displacement caused by an applied light field of variable frequency. This provides a solution to ``needle in a haystack'' problems, such as the search for narrow clock transitions in highly charged ions, recently discussed by S. Chen et al. (Phys. Rev. Applied 22, 054059). The main bottleneck is the search speed over a frequency bandwidth, which can be increased by enhancing the sensitivity of displacement detection. In this work, we explore two complementary improvements: the use of squeezed motional states, explained using an analytical phase space model and optimal statistical postprocessing of data using a hypothesis testing framework. We demonstrate that each method independently provides a substantial boost to search speed. Their combination effectively…
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