论文标题
确定相干状态估计的自适应光子计数测量的渐近极限
Determination of the asymptotic limits of adaptive photon counting measurements for coherent-state optical phase estimation
论文作者
论文摘要
光相规范相测量的物理实现尚不清楚。旨在确定单次镜头中光场的相位的单相估计对于量子信息处理和计量学至关重要。在这里,我们提出了一系列策略,用于基于自适应非高斯,光子计数,具有相干位移的测量结果,以对相干状态进行单相阶段估计,随着测量的进展,信息增益最大化,这些策略随着测量的进展而最大程度地增长,这些策略比最知名的适应性高斯策略具有更高的敏感性。为了了解其基本特征并证明其出色的表现,我们基于贝叶斯的实验最佳设计进行了全面的统计分析,该分析提供了这些非高斯策略的自然描述。该数学框架以及数值分析和蒙特卡洛方法,使我们能够根据旨在最大化信息增益的光子计数来确定策略敏感性的渐近限制,这是一个具有挑战性的问题。此外,我们表明,这些非高斯相位估计策略的功能形式与仅与缩放系数不同的渐近极限中的规范相测量相同,因此在物理上可实现的测量中提供了可实现的最高灵敏度,用于对已知已知已知的相干状态的单光相估计。这项工作阐明了基于光子计数的光学量子计量和相估计的优化非高斯测量的潜力。
Physical realizations of the canonical phase measurement for the optical phase are unknown. Single-shot phase estimation, which aims to determine the phase of an optical field in a single shot, is critical in quantum information processing and metrology. Here we present a family of strategies for single-shot phase estimation of coherent states based on adaptive non-Gaussian, photon counting, measurements with coherent displacements that maximize information gain as the measurement progresses, which have higher sensitivities over the best known adaptive Gaussian strategies. To gain understanding about their fundamental characteristics and demonstrate their superior performance, we develop a comprehensive statistical analysis based on the Bayesian optimal design of experiments, which provides a natural description of these non-Gaussian strategies. This mathematical framework, together with numerical analysis and Monte Carlo methods, allows us to determine the asymptotic limits in sensitivity of strategies based on photon counting designed to maximize information gain, which up to now had been a challenging problem. Moreover, we show that these non-Gaussian phase estimation strategies have the same functional form as the canonical phase measurement in the asymptotic limit differing only by a scaling factor, thus providing the highest sensitivity among physically-realizable measurements for single-shot phase estimation of coherent states known to date. This work shines light into the potential of optimized non-Gaussian measurements based on photon counting for optical quantum metrology and phase estimation.