Published December 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Time-Energy Uncertainty Relation for Noisy Quantum Metrology

  • 1. ROR icon Freie Universität Berlin
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 3. ROR icon ETH Zurich
  • 4. ROR icon Grenoble Alpes University
  • 5. ROR icon Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science

Abstract

Detection of very weak forces and precise measurement of time are two of the many applications of quantum metrology to science and technology. To sense an unknown physical parameter, one prepares an initial state of a probe system, allows the probe to evolve as governed by a Hamiltonian H for some time t, and then measures the probe. If H is known, we can estimate t by this method; if t is known, we can estimate classical parameters on which H depends. The accuracy of a quantum sensor can be limited by either intrinsic quantum noise or by noise arising from the interactions of the probe with its environment. In this work, we introduce and study a fundamental trade-off, which relates the amount by which noise reduces the accuracy of a quantum clock to the amount of information about the energy of the clock that leaks to the environment. Specifically, we consider an idealized scenario in which a party Alice prepares an initial pure state of the clock, allows the clock to evolve for a time that is not precisely known, and then transmits the clock through a noisy channel to a party Bob. Meanwhile, the environment (Eve) receives any information about the clock that is lost during transmission. We prove that Bob's loss of quantum Fisher information about the elapsed time is equal to Eve's gain of quantum Fisher information about a complementary energy parameter. We also prove a similar, but more general, trade-off that applies when Bob and Eve wish to estimate the values of parameters associated with two noncommuting observables. We derive the necessary and sufficient conditions for the accuracy of the clock to be unaffected by the noise, which form a subset of the Knill-Laflamme error-correction conditions. A state and its local time-evolution direction, if they satisfy these conditions, are said to form a metrological code. We provide a scheme to construct metrological codes in the stabilizer formalism. We show that there are metrological codes that cannot be written as a quantum error-correcting code with similar distance in which the Hamiltonian acts as a logical operator, potentially offering new schemes for constructing states that do not lose any sensitivity upon application of a noisy channel. We discuss applications of the trade-off relation to sensing using a quantum many-body probe subject to erasure or amplitude-damping noise.

Copyright and License

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and
DOI.

Acknowledgement

The authors are grateful to Fernando Brandão, Jonathan Conrad, Rafał Demkowicz-Dobrzański, Richard Küng, Johannes Meyer, Yingkai Ouyang, Renato Renner, Ralph Silva, Ryan Sweke, and Nathan Walk for discussions. We warmly thank Gian Michele Graf for his invaluable input for our proofs in infinite-dimensional spaces. M. W. acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) via an Ambizione Fellowship (PZ00P2_179914). J.M.R. acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation Sinergia grant CRSII5 186364. M.W. and J.M.R. acknowledge the National Centre of Competence in Research QSIT. Ph.F. and J.E. acknowledge support from the DFG (FOR 2724, CRC 183, EI 519/21-1), the FQXi, the QuantERA (HQCC), the BMBF (RealistiQ, Hybrid, MuniQC-Atoms) the ERC (DebugQC) and the Einstein Research Unit on quantum devices. This research is also part of the Munich Quantum Valley (K8), which is supported by the Bavarian state government with funds from the Hightech Agenda Bayern Plus. V.V.A. acknowledges funding from NSF QLCI Award No. OMA-2120757. Contributions to this work by NIST, an agency of the U.S. government, are not subject to U.S. copyright. Any mention of commercial products does not indicate endorsement by NIST. J.P. acknowledges funding from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science (DE-NA0003525, DE-SC0020290, DE-ACO2-07CH11359, DE-SC0018407), the Simons Foundation It from Qubit Collaboration, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-19-1-0360), and the National Science Foundation (PHY-1733907). The Institute for Quantum Information and Matter is an NSF Physics Frontiers Center.

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Additional details

Created:
February 4, 2025
Modified:
February 4, 2025