Real-time optimal quantum control for atomic magnetometers with decoherence
Julia Amoros-Binefa

TL;DR
This paper develops a real-time quantum control strategy for atomic magnetometers that approaches fundamental sensitivity limits imposed by noise, enabling optimal detection of static and dynamic magnetic fields.
Contribution
It introduces a scalable quantum dynamical model and an estimation-control architecture that achieves near-optimal sensitivity in atomic magnetometry under decoherence.
Findings
Quantum limit on sensitivity scales linearly with atom number and sensing time.
The proposed model and control strategy enable quantum-limited tracking of magnetic fields.
The approach can detect biologically relevant signals and generate entanglement in atomic ensembles.
Abstract
Quantum entanglement, in the form of spin squeezing, is known to improve the sensitivity of atomic sensors to static or slowly varying fields. Sensing transient events presents a distinct challenge, requires different analysis tools, and has not been shown to benefit from entanglement in practically important scenarios such as spin-precession magnetometry. To address this, we apply concepts from continuous quantum measurements and estimation theory to optical atomic magnetometers, aiming to accurately model these devices, interpret their measurement data, control their dynamics, and achieve optimal sensitivity. Quantifying this optimal performance requires determining a fundamental quantum limit on sensitivity. We derive this limit, imposed by noise, and show that it scales at best linearly with sensing time and atom number N, ruling out any super-classical scaling. This limit is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
