Title: Quantum Optical Sensing: Single Mode, MultiMode, and Continuous Time
1Quantum Optical Sensing Single Mode,
Multi-Mode, and Continuous Time
2Quantum Optical Sensing
- Single-mode optical interferometry
- semiclassical theory shot-noise limited
performance - quantum theory coherent-state versus
squeezed-state operation - Quantum phase measurement
- Susskind-Glogower positive operator-valued
measurement - two-mode phase measurement N00N-state
performance - two-mode phase measurement with guaranteed
precision - Continuous-time optical sensing
- semiclassical theory shot-noise limited
broadband performance - quantum theory what are the ultimate limits?
- Conclusions
3Phase-Sensing Interferometry with Classical Light
- Phase-conjugate Mach-Zehnder interferometer
- Homodyne measurement of
4Phase-Sensing Interferometry with Coherent States
- Phase-conjugate Mach-Zehnder interferometer
- Homodyne measurement of
5Phase-Sensing Interferometry with Squeezed States
- Phase-conjugate Mach-Zehnder interferometer
- Homodyne measurement of
Caves, PRD (1981) Bondurant Shapiro, PRD (1984)
6Single-Mode Number and Phase Wave Functions
- Single-mode field with annihilation operator
- Number kets and phase kets
- Number-ket and phase-ket state representations
- Fourier transform relation
Shapiro Shepard PRA (1991)
7Susskind-Glogower Phase Measurement
- Susskind-Glogower (SG) phase operator
- SG positive operator-valued measurement (POVM)
- SG-POVM probability density function
Susskind Glogower, Physics (1964)
Shapiro Shepard PRA (1991)
8Two-Mode Phase Measurement
- Signal and conjugate modes
- A pair of commuting observables
- When conjugate mode is in its vacuum state,
measurement yields outcome with the SG-POVM
probability density - BUT other behavior is possible when signal and
conjugate are entangled
Shapiro Shepard PRA (1991)
9N00N-State Phase Measurement
- Phase-conjugate interferometer with
measurement - and N00N-state source
- Phase-measurement probability density function
Lee, Kok, Dowling JMO (2002)
10Phase Measurement with Guaranteed Precision
- Phase-conjugate interferometer with
measurement - and N00N-state sum
- Optimum phase-measurement probability density
function
Shapiro, Phys Scripta (1993)
11Performance Comparison for ? 0 and N 50
- Phase-conjugate interferometry
- Only the coherent-state case degrades gracefully
with loss!
12Continuous-Time Coherent-State Vibration Sensing
- Multi-bounce interrogation of vibrating mirror
- Coherent-state source and heterodyne detection
receiver - gives
instantaneous frequency swing - Work in the wideband frequency modulation (WBFM)
regime
13Continuous-Time Coherent-State Vibration Sensing
- Above-threshold WBFM reception requires
- Above-threshold WBFM rms velocity error is
- beating behavior seen earlier for
nonclassical light - is the average
number of detected signal photons in the
vibration-signature bandwidth - Because classical light is used, loss
degradation is graceful!
14Can Classical Light Do Even Better than 1/N3/2?
- Pulse-frequency modulation analog communication
- transmitted as a coherent state and received by
heterodyning - Cramér-Rao bound on rms error in estimate is
- Cramér-Rao-bound performance prevails when
- With exponential bandwidth expansion,
goes down exponentially with increasing
Yuen, Quantum Squeezing (2004)
15Towards the Ultimate Quantum Limit
- The Fourier duality between the number kets and
phase kets for a single-mode field suggests that
we seek a similar duality for continuous time - For unity quantum efficiency continuous-time
direct detection the measurement eigenkets are
known - produces a photocount waveform on
with counts at (and only at) -
- A suitable Fourier transform of this state may
guide us to the ultimate quantum measurement for
instantaneous frequency
Shapiro, Quantum Semiclass Opt. (1998)
16Conclusions
- Single-mode interferometric phase measurements
- standard quantum limit achieved by coherent
states - Heisenberg limit achieved by squeezed states
- Two-mode phase measurements
- Heisenberg limit achieved by N00N states
- guaranteed precision at Heisenberg limit achieved
by N00N sum - The BAD news
- highly squeezed states and high-order N00N states
hard to generate - nonclassical-state phase sensors do not degrade
gracefully with loss - The GOOD news
- continuous-time, coherent-state, wideband systems
may offer superior performance and are robust to
loss effects - theorists still have some fundamental quantum
limits to determine