Ramsey interferometry in correlated quantum noise environments
ORAL
Abstract
We quantify the impact of spatiotemporally correlated Gaussian quantum noise on frequency estimation by Ramsey interferometry. While correlations in a classical noise environment can be exploited to reduce uncertainty relative to the uncorrelated case, we show that quantum noise environments with frequency asymmetric spectra generally introduce additional sources of uncertainty due to uncontrolled entanglement of the sensing system mediated by the bath. For the representative case of collective noise from bosonic sources, and experimentally relevant collective spin observables, we find that the uncertainty can increase exponentially with the number of probes. As a concrete application, we show that correlated quantum noise due to a lattice vibrational mode can preclude superclassical precision scaling in current amplitude sensing experiments with trapped ions. This work was recently reported in PRA (Rapid Communications) 98, 020102 (2018).
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Presenters
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Leigh Norris
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College, Dartmouth College
Authors
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Leigh Norris
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College, Dartmouth College
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Felix Beaudoin
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College, Dartmouth College
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Lorenza Viola
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College, Dartmouth College