Nonlinear classical and quantum sensing by thermal noise
Source Title: Quantum Sensing, Imaging, and Precision Metrology III, DOI Link
View abstract ⏷
We have recently shown that interferometers with nonlinear cross-Kerr coupling allow us to coherently filter incident thermal noise, transforming it into an information resource. State-of-the-art technology enables Kerrnonlinear interferometers to achieve supersensitive resolution in noise sensors or microscopes using thermal noise sources of few photons
Thermodynamic sensing of quantum nonlinear noise correlations
Source Title: Quantum Science and Technology, Quartile: Q1, DOI Link
View abstract ⏷
We put forth the concept of quantum noise sensing in nonlinear two-mode interferometers coupled to mechanical oscillators. These autonomous machines are capable of sensing quantum nonlinear correlations of two-mode noisy fields via their thermodynamic variable of extractable work, alias work capacity (WC) or ergotropy. The fields are formed by thermal noise input via its interaction with multi-level systems inside the interferometer. Such interactions amount to the generation of two-mode quantum nonlinear gauge fields that may be partly unknown. We show that by monitoring a mechanical oscillator coupled to the interferometer, one can sense the WC of one of the output field modes and thereby reveal the quantum nonlinear correlations of the field. The proposed quantum sensing method can provide an alternative to quantum multiport interferometry where the output field is unraveled by tomography. This method may advance the simulation and control of multimode quantum nonlinear gauge fields. © 2024 IOP Publishing Ltd. All rights, including for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies, are reserved.
Supersensitive phase estimation by thermal light in a Kerr-nonlinear interferometric setup
Dr Nilakantha Meher, Poem E., Opatrný T., Firstenberg O., Kurizki G
Source Title: Physical Review A, Quartile: Q2, DOI Link
View abstract ⏷
Estimation of the phase delay between interferometer arms is the core of transmission phase microscopy. Such phase estimation may exhibit an error below the standard quantum (shot-noise) limit, if the input is an entangled two-mode state, e.g., a N00N state. We show, by contrast, that such supersensitive phase estimation (SSPE) is achievable by incoherent, e.g., thermal, light that is injected into a Mach-Zehnder interferometer via a Kerr-nonlinear two-mode coupler. Phase error is shown to be reduced below 1/n¯, n¯ being the mean photon number, by thermal input in such interferometric setups, even for small nonlinear phase shifts per photon pair or for significant photon loss. Remarkably, the phase accuracy achievable in such setups by thermal input surpasses that of coherent light with the same n¯. Available mode couplers with giant Kerr nonlinearity that stem either from dipole-dipole interactions of Rydberg polaritons in a cold atomic gas, or from cavity-enhanced dispersive atom-field interactions, may exploit such effects to substantially advance interferometric phase microscopy using incoherent, faint light sources. © 2024 American Physical Society.