A tensor network approach to sensing quantum light-matter interactions

Oral-In-person  · Withdrawn

Abstract

We present the fundamental limits to the precision of estimating parameters of a continuously monitored quantum emitter, even when some of the light is lost. This practically inevitable scenario leads to a tripartite quantum system of matter, and light—detected and lost. Evaluating fundamental information theoretic quantities such as the quantum Fisher information of only the detected light was heretofore impossible. We succeed by expressing the final quantum state of the detected light as a matrix product operator. We apply our method to resonance fluorescence and pulsed spectroscopy. For both, we quantify the sub-optimality of continuous homodyning and photo-counting measurements in parameter estimation. For the latter, we find that single-photon Fock state pulses allow higher precision per photon than pulses of coherent states. Our method should be valuable in studies of quantum light-matter interactions, quantum light spectroscopy, quantum stochastic thermodynamics, and quantum clocks

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12399

Presenters

  • Aiman Khan

    • University of Nottingham

Authors

  • Aiman Khan

    • University of Nottingham
  • Francesco Albarelli

  • Animesh Datta

    • University of Warwick