Quantum Metrological Gain
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The quantum metrological gain is defined in the context of carrying out a metrological task using a quantum state of a multiparticle system. It is the sensitivity of parameter estimation using the state compared to what can be reached using
separable states In quantum mechanics, separable states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a convex combination of product states. Product states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a tensor product of states in each space. ...
, i.e., states without
quantum entanglement Quantum entanglement is the phenomenon where the quantum state of each Subatomic particle, particle in a group cannot be described independently of the state of the others, even when the particles are separated by a large distance. The topic o ...
. Hence, the quantum metrological gain is given as the fraction of the sensitivity achieved by the state and the maximal sensitivity achieved by
separable states In quantum mechanics, separable states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a convex combination of product states. Product states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a tensor product of states in each space. ...
. The best separable state is often the trivial fully polarized state, in which all spins point into the same direction. If the metrological gain is larger than one then the quantum state is more useful for making precise measurements than
separable states In quantum mechanics, separable states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a convex combination of product states. Product states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a tensor product of states in each space. ...
. Clearly, in this case the quantum state is also entangled.


Background

The metrological gain is, in general, the gain in sensitivity of a quantum state compared to a product state. Metrological gains up to 100 are reported in experiments. Let us consider a
unitary Unitary may refer to: Mathematics * Unitary divisor * Unitary element * Unitary group * Unitary matrix * Unitary morphism * Unitary operator * Unitary transformation * Unitary representation * Unitarity (physics) * ''E''-unitary inverse semigr ...
dynamics with a parameter \theta from initial state \varrho_0, :\varrho(\theta)=\exp(-iA\theta)\varrho_0\exp(+iA\theta), the
quantum Fisher information The quantum Fisher information is a central quantity in quantum metrology and is the quantum analogue of the classical Fisher information. It is one of the central quantities used to qualify the utility of an input state, especially in Mach–Zehnd ...
F_ constrains the achievable precision in statistical estimation of the parameter \theta via the quantum Cramér–Rao bound as :(\Delta \theta)^2 \ge \frac 1 , where m is the number of independent repetitions. For the formula, one can see that the larger the quantum Fisher information, the smaller can be the uncertainty of the parameter estimation. For a multiparticle system of N spin-1/2 particles :F_ varrho, J_z\le N holds for separable states, where F_ is the quantum Fisher information, : J_z=\sum_^N j_z^, and j_z^ is a single particle angular momentum component. Thus, the metrological gain can be characterize by :\frac. The maximum for general quantum states is given by :F_ varrho, J_z\le N^2. Hence,
quantum entanglement Quantum entanglement is the phenomenon where the quantum state of each Subatomic particle, particle in a group cannot be described independently of the state of the others, even when the particles are separated by a large distance. The topic o ...
is needed to reach the maximum precision in
quantum metrology Quantum metrology is the study of making high-resolution and highly sensitive measurements of physical parameters using quantum theory to describe the physical systems, particularly exploiting quantum entanglement and quantum Squeezed coherent s ...
. Moreover, for quantum states with an
entanglement depth In quantum physics, entanglement depth characterizes the strength of multiparticle entanglement. An entanglement depth k means that the quantum state of a particle ensemble cannot be described under the assumption that particles interacted with e ...
k, :F_ varrho, J_z\le sk^2 + r^ holds, where s=\lfloor N/k \rfloor is the largest integer smaller than or equal to N/k, and r=N-sk is the remainder from dividing N by k. Hence, a higher and higher levels of multipartite entanglement is needed to achieve a better and better accuracy in parameter estimation. It is possible to obtain a weaker but simpler bound :F_ varrho, J_z\le Nk. Hence, a lower bound on the entanglement depth is obtained as :\frac \le k.


Mathematical definition for a system of qudits

The situation for qudits with a dimension larger than d=2 is more complicated. In this more general case, the metrological gain for a given Hamiltonian is defined as the ratio of the
quantum Fisher information The quantum Fisher information is a central quantity in quantum metrology and is the quantum analogue of the classical Fisher information. It is one of the central quantities used to qualify the utility of an input state, especially in Mach–Zehnd ...
of a state and the maximum of the quantum Fisher information for the same Hamiltonian for separable states g_(\varrho)=\frac, where the Hamiltonian is \mathcal H=h_1+h_2+...+h_N, and h_n acts on the ''nth'' spin. The maximum of the quantum Fisher information for
separable states In quantum mechanics, separable states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a convex combination of product states. Product states are multipartite quantum states that can be written as a tensor product of states in each space. ...
is given as \mathcal F_Q^(\mathcal H)=\sum_^N \lambda_(h_n)-\lambda_(h_n) 2, where \lambda_(X) and \lambda_(X) denote the maximum and minimum eigenvalues of X, respectively. We also define the metrological gain optimized over all local Hamiltonians as g(\varrho)=\max_g_(\varrho). The case of qubits is special. In this case, if the local Hamitlonians are chosen to be h_n=\sum_ c_\sigma_l, where c_ are real numbers, and , \vec c_n, =1, then \mathcal F_Q^(\mathcal H)=4N, independently from the concrete values of c_. Thus, in the case of qubits, the optimization of the gain over the local Hamiltonian can be simpler. For qudits with a dimension larger than 2, the optimization is more complicated.


Relation to quantum entanglement

If the gain larger than one g(\varrho)>1, then the state is entangled, and it is more useful metrologically than separable states. In short, we call such states metrologically useful. If h_n all have identical lowest and highest eigenvalues, then g(\varrho)>k-1 implies metrologically useful k-partite entanglement. If for the gain g(\varrho)>N-1 holds, then the state has metrologically useful genuine multipartite entanglement. In general, for quantum states g(\varrho)\le N holds.


Properties of the metrological gain

The metrological gain cannot increase if we add an ancilla to a subsystem or we provide an additional copy of the state. The metrological gain g(\varrho) is convex in the quantum state.


Numerical determination of the gain

There are efficient methods to determine the metrological gain via an optimization over local Hamiltonians. They are based on a see-saw method that iterates two steps alternatively.


References

{{reflist Quantum information science Quantum optics