The Boundary Time Crystal as a light source for quantum enhanced sensing beyond the Heisenberg Limit
Malik Jirasek, Igor Lesanovsky, Albert Cabot

TL;DR
This paper proposes using a boundary time crystal as a novel light source to achieve quantum-enhanced phase estimation, surpassing the Heisenberg limit by exploiting temporal correlations in a driven-dissipative quantum system.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach utilizing boundary time crystals for quantum sensing, demonstrating potential to exceed traditional measurement limits.
Findings
Scaling surpasses the Heisenberg limit with system size.
Temporal correlations enhance measurement sensitivity.
Protocol employs an auxiliary system for improved detection.
Abstract
Modern precision measurements, such as interferometry for detecting gravitational waves, rely on the estimation of optical phases encoded in light fields. Here, we propose to exploit the collectively enhanced output field of a driven-dissipative many-body open quantum system as a light source in order to improve the precision of estimating optical phases. Pronounced temporal correlations of such output fields benefit the sensitivity of measurement protocols, which we show theoretically by employing a boundary time crystal as a light source. The fundamental bound on the precision of such estimation shows scaling with system size that surpasses the Heisenberg limit and obeys the standard quantum limit in the measurement time. This scaling can be partially harnessed by a protocol, in which the phase shifted light field is guided into an auxiliary replica system, which serves as a detector…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum many-body systems · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
