Fundamental limits of pulsed quantum light spectroscopy: Dipole moment
estimation
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2210.01065v2
- Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2023 16:14:33 GMT
- Title: Fundamental limits of pulsed quantum light spectroscopy: Dipole moment
estimation
- Authors: Francesco Albarelli, Evangelia Bisketzi, Aiman Khan and Animesh Datta
- Abstract summary: We study the limits of the precision of estimating parameters of a quantum matter system probed by a travelling pulse of quantum light.
Our work initiates a quantum information theoretic methodology for developing the theory and practice of quantum light spectroscopy.
- Score: 0.1529342790344802
- License: http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/
- Abstract: We study the fundamental limits of the precision of estimating parameters of
a quantum matter system when it is probed by a travelling pulse of quantum
light. In particular, we focus on the estimation of the interaction strength
between the pulse and a two-level atom, equivalent to the estimation of the
dipole moment. Our analysis of single-photon pulses highlights the interplay
between the information gained from the absorption of the photon by the atom as
measured in absorption spectroscopy, and the perturbation to the temporal mode
of the photon due to spontaneous emission. Beyond the single-photon regime, we
introduce an approximate model to study more general states of light in the
limit of short pulses, where spontaneous emission can be neglected. We also
show that for a vast class of entangled biphoton states, quantum entanglement
between the signal mode interacting with the atom and the idler mode provides
no fundamental advantage and the same precision can be obtained with a
separable state. We conclude by studying the estimation of the electric dipole
moment of a sodium atom using quantum light. Our work initiates a quantum
information theoretic methodology for developing the theory and practice of
quantum light spectroscopy.
Related papers
- A coherence method generating macroscopic quantum features using polarization-basis control and its projection measurements of laser light [0.0]
Quantum entanglement between paired photons is the foundation of optical quantum computing, quantum sensing, and quantum networks.
Recently, a coherence-based approach has been explored to understand the so-called quantum mystery of nonlocal intensity fringes emerging from local randomness.
Here, a pure coherence method is presented to create macroscopic quantum features using conventional laser light via linear optics-based measurement modifications.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-10-02T03:00:34Z) - Non-classical excitation of a solid-state quantum emitter [0.0]
We show that a single photon is sufficient to change the state of a solid-state quantum emitter.
These results suggest future possibilities ranging from enabling quantum information transfer in a quantum network to building deterministic entangling gates for photonic quantum computing.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-07-30T16:16:58Z) - A Theory of Quantum Jumps [44.99833362998488]
We study fluorescence and the phenomenon of quantum jumps'' in idealized models of atoms coupled to the quantized electromagnetic field.
Our results amount to a derivation of the fundamental randomness in the quantum-mechanical description of microscopic systems.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-04-16T11:00:46Z) - Amplification of quantum transfer and quantum ratchet [56.47577824219207]
We study a model of amplification of quantum transfer and making it directed which we call the quantum ratchet model.
The ratchet effect is achieved in the quantum control model with dissipation and sink, where the Hamiltonian depends on vibrations in the energy difference synchronized with transitions between energy levels.
Amplitude and frequency of the oscillating vibron together with the dephasing rate are the parameters of the quantum ratchet which determine its efficiency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-12-31T14:04:43Z) - Solution-phase single-particle spectroscopy for probing multi-polaronic
dynamics in quantum emitters at femtosecond resolution [6.722815153728718]
We develop a solution-phase single-particle pump-probe spectroscopy with photon correlation detection that captures sample-averaged dynamics in single molecules and/or defect states with unprecedented clarity at femtosecond resolution.
Our work provides a framework for ultrafast spectroscopy in single emitters, molecules, or defects prone to photoluminescence intermittency and heterogeneity, opening new avenues of extreme-scale characterization and synthetic improvements for quantum information applications.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-04-03T06:14:14Z) - Correlated steady states and Raman lasing in continuously pumped and
probed atomic ensembles [68.8204255655161]
We consider an ensemble of Alkali atoms that are continuously optically pumped and probed.
Due to the collective scattering of photons at large optical depth, the steady state of atoms does not correspond to an uncorrelated tensor-product state.
We find and characterize regimes of Raman lasing, akin to the model of a superradiant laser.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-05-10T06:54:54Z) - Two-photon resonance fluorescence of two interacting non-identical
quantum emitters [77.34726150561087]
We study a system of two interacting, non-indentical quantum emitters driven by a coherent field.
We show that the features imprinted by the two-photon dynamics into the spectrum of resonance fluorescence are particularly sensitive to changes in the distance between emitters.
This can be exploited for applications such as superresolution imaging of point-like sources.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-06-04T16:13:01Z) - Waveguide quantum electrodynamics: collective radiance and photon-photon
correlations [151.77380156599398]
Quantum electrodynamics deals with the interaction of photons propagating in a waveguide with localized quantum emitters.
We focus on guided photons and ordered arrays, leading to super- and sub-radiant states, bound photon states and quantum correlations with promising quantum information applications.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-11T17:49:52Z) - Entangled Two-Photon Absorption by Atoms and Molecules: A Quantum Optics
Tutorial [0.0]
Two-photon absorption (TPA) and other nonlinear interactions of molecules with time-frequency-entangled photon pairs (EPP) has been predicted to display a variety of fascinating effects.
This paper presents a detailed theoretical study of one- and two-photon absorption by molecules, focusing on how to treat the quantum nature of light.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-03T17:46:46Z) - Internal Photo Effect from a Single Quantum Emitter [0.5172201569251683]
Internal photo-effect that emits electrons from the dot by an intra-band excitation is studied.
We find a linear dependence of the optically generated emission rate on the intensity excitation.
The results also quantify an important, but mostly neglected, mechanism that may fundamentally limit the coherence times in solid-state quantum optical devices.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-10-21T12:13:07Z) - Theory of waveguide-QED with moving emitters [68.8204255655161]
We study a system composed by a waveguide and a moving quantum emitter in the single excitation subspace.
We first characterize single-photon scattering off a single moving quantum emitter, showing both nonreciprocal transmission and recoil-induced reduction of the quantum emitter motional energy.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-03-20T12:14:10Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.