학술논문

Frequency measurements beyond the Heisenberg time-energy limit with a single atom
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Quantum Physics
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors
Language
Abstract
The Heisenberg time-energy relation prevents determination of an atomic transition to better than the inverse of the measurement time. The relation generally applies to frequency estimation of a near-resonant field [1-3], since information on the field frequency can be used to infer the atomic transition [4, 5]. Here we demonstrate a frequency estimation technique that provides an uncertainty orders of magnitude below the Heisenberg limit with a single atom. With access to $N$ atoms, we propose a fundamental uncertainty limit improving as $\sqrt{N}$, regardless of whether entanglement is employed. We describe implementation of the quantum fourier transform to estimate an unknown frequency without using entanglement. A comparison to classical algorithms severely limits the benefit that quantum algorithms provide for frequency estimation and that entanglement provides to quantum sensing in general.
Comment: liam.mcguinness@anu.edu.au