A Realistic Framework for Quantum Sensing under Finite Resources
Zden\v{e}k Hradil, Jaroslav \v{R}eh\'a\v{c}ek

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive framework for quantum sensing that accounts for finite resources, emphasizing the importance of data analysis and estimator design over solely relying on quantum Fisher information for performance evaluation.
Contribution
It introduces an end-to-end operational framework for quantum sensing, highlighting the significance of inference data sets and estimator construction in realistic scenarios.
Findings
Bayesian analysis shows NOON states offer no advantage over classical methods with finite resources.
Estimator design and repetition determine achievable precision in quantum sensing.
QFI may not reliably indicate practical metrological advantage under realistic conditions.
Abstract
Quantum-enhanced sensing is commonly benchmarked using the quantum Fisher information (QFI), often interpreted as a direct indicator of achievable precision. However, this quantity acquires operational meaning only within a fully specified inference framework that consistently incorporates state preparation, measurement design, resource accounting, estimator construction, prior information, and finite data effects. Here we establish a realistic end-to-end framework for quantum sensing under finite resources and identify general principles required for operationally meaningful performance assessment. A central conceptual point is that the relevant unit of estimation is not a single detection event but the inference data set required to construct a consistent estimator. We apply this approach to several paradigmatic sensing strategies frequently cited in the literature. Revisiting phase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Mechanical and Optical Resonators
