Fundamental Limits of Continuous Gaussian Quantum Metrology
Kazuki Yokomizo, Aashish A. Clerk, Yuto Ashida

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for continuous Gaussian quantum metrology with bosonic systems, deriving fundamental bounds on precision scaling and illustrating potential enhancements through various setups.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analytical approach to quantify and bound the quantum Fisher information in continuous bosonic sensing, revealing optimal scaling limits and resource trade-offs.
Findings
Heisenberg-type scaling is possible with multiple modes.
Global setups can achieve quadratic scaling in mode number.
Nonreciprocal setups can exponentially enhance global QFI.
Abstract
Continuous quantum metrology holds promise for realizing high-precision sensing by harnessing information progressively carried away by the radiation quanta emitted into the environment. Despite recent progress, a comprehensive understanding of the fundamental precision limits of continuous metrology with bosonic systems is currently lacking. We develop a general theoretical framework for quantum metrology with multimode free bosons under continuous Gaussian measurements. We derive analytical expressions for the asymptotic growth rates of the global quantum Fisher information (QFI) and the environmental QFI, which quantify the total information encoded in the joint system-environment state and the information accessible from the emitted radiation, respectively. We derive fundamental bounds on these quantities, showing that while Heisenberg-type scaling with the number of modes is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates
