From State-Space Transport to Measurement-Aware Distinguishability in Quantum Sensing
Arnaud Coatanhay, Ang\'elique Dr\'emeau

TL;DR
This paper introduces transport-based distinguishability metrics for quantum sensing, comparing them with fidelity measures, and analyzes their robustness and measurement adaptation in lossy environments.
Contribution
It develops new transport-based metrics for quantum sensing, providing analytical comparisons and measurement-adapted criteria in lossy and fluctuating environments.
Findings
Transport metrics are less compressed than fidelity in lossy environments.
The isotropic metric favors coherent displacement over squeezing.
Measurement-adapted metrics retain sensitivity to transmissivity in strong-loss regimes.
Abstract
Overlap-based distinguishability measures, such as fidelity- or Chernoff-type quantities, play a central role in quantum sensing and quantum illumination. In strongly lossy and fluctuating environments, however, these quantities may become numerically compressed and therefore less informative for optimization, monitoring, or adaptive control. In this work, we investigate transport-based distinguishability criteria for lossy quantum sensing. We first introduce an isotropic Gaussian transport metric defined on first and second moments and compare it with a fidelity-based benchmark in a thermal-loss model. We then show analytically that, within an isotropic thermal-reference geometry, this metric locally disfavors squeezing relative to coherent displacement, thereby distinguishing global phase-space robustness from directional metrological advantage. We next introduce a projected transport…
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