Detecting zero-point fluctuations with stochastic Brownian oscillators
Adrian E. Rubio Lopez, Felipe Herrera

TL;DR
This paper introduces a method to detect quantum zero-point fluctuations using low-quality oscillators by amplifying quantum deviations through controlled frequency noise, expanding quantum sensing capabilities.
Contribution
It presents a novel amplification strategy that enables zero-point fluctuation detection with finite-temperature, low-quality oscillators, enhancing quantum metrology tools.
Findings
Amplification of quantum deviations via multiplicative frequency noise
Detection of zero-point fluctuations using virial ratio as a witness
Potential for measuring quantum properties of thermal environments
Abstract
High-quality quantum oscillators are preferred for precision sensing of external physical parameter because if the noise level due to interactions with the environment is too high, metrological information can be lost due to quantum decoherence. On the other hand, stronger interactions with a thermal environment could be seen a resource for new types of metrological schemes. We present a general amplification strategy that enables the detection zero-point fluctuations using low-quality quantum oscillators at finite temperature. We show that by injecting a controllable level of multiplicative frequency noise in a Brownian oscillator, quantum deviations from the virial theorem can be amplified by a parameter proportional to the strength of the frequency noise at constant temperature. As an application, we suggest a scheme in which the virial ratio is used as a witness of the quantum…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Stochastic processes and financial applications
