Probing the Limits of Dispersive Quantum Thermometry with a Nonlinear Mach-Zehnder-Based Quantum Simulator
Daniel Y. Akamatsu, Lucas Ferreira R. de Moura, Gabriella G. Damas, Gentil D. de Moraes Neto, Victor Montenegro, Norton G. de Almeida

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the fundamental limits of quantum thermometry using a nonlinear Mach-Zehnder interferometer, demonstrating optimal precision bounds and proposing a flexible quantum simulation platform for benchmarking temperature sensing in quantum systems.
Contribution
It provides an exact analytical analysis of dispersive quantum thermometry and introduces a versatile quantum simulator platform for testing thermometric performance.
Findings
Achieves the standard quantum limit of precision in temperature estimation.
Proposes a quantum thermometer based on a nonlinear Mach-Zehnder interferometer.
Enables initialization of atomic ensembles with positive and negative temperatures.
Abstract
Temperature estimation, known as thermometry, is a critical sensing task for physical systems operating in the quantum regime. Indeed, thermal fluctuations can significantly degrade quantum coherence. Therefore, accurately determining the system's operating temperature is a crucial first step toward distinguishing thermal noise from other sources of decoherence. In this work, we estimate the unknown temperature of a collection of identical and independent two-level atoms dispersively probed by a single-mode quantized electromagnetic field. In contrast to previous works, we present an analytical sensing analysis demonstrating that the joint atom-field evolution -- without any assumptions or approximations -- can achieve, at best, the standard quantum limit of precision concerning the number of field excitations. To investigate our analysis further, we propose and implement a quantum…
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