1. Gaussian quantum metrology for fundamental physics
- Author
-
Branford, Dominic
- Subjects
530 ,QC Physics - Abstract
Optical and optomechanical systems are exploited for quantum technologies to perform highly precise measurements for fundamental physics as well as biological and engineering tasks. Theoretical studies using tools from statistics and quantum information can greatly aid studies of the sensing capabilities of quantum systems and experimental designs. These allow us to quantify the amount of information about a parameter encoded in a quantum state itself and examine how that can be extracted through measurements. In this thesis we show how mechanical squeezing and measurements beyond position can be utilised to improve the precision of wavepacket expansion measurements which can test collapse models of quantum mechanics. Particularly, that squeezing can compensate for the free-fall time which is often the most significant limiting factor in such experiments, and measurements of other quadratures can offer increased precision. We demonstrate that the use of additional optical fields to measure the displacement of a free mass in a radiation-pressure limited interferometer cannot surpass the ultimate precision of the single-mode interferometer. This work applies to the likes of laser-interferometric gravitational wave detectors. Finally, we venture into multi-parameter estimation: we calculate bounds for multi-mode Gaussian states used to estimate many phase shifts and optimise over the input states. In contrast to the—far less experimentally feasible—multi-mode generalisations of N00N states we see no significant improvement when using multi-mode Gaussian states for the task. Given their comparable performance in single-phase estimation this is a new limitation of Gaussian states appearing only at the multi-parameter level.
- Published
- 2019