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Experimental demonstration of super-Heisenberg quantum metrology with indefinite gate order

POSTER

Abstract

The Heisenberg precision limit, a 1/N scaling for ensemble measurement with N independent elements, is widely believed to represent the ultimate precision limit of quantum metrology. Several proposals have challenged this belief in the past, for example using non-linear interactions among the probes. Nevertheless, the Heisenberg limit is found to stand firm and remain observed by these proposals with respect to relevant resources, such as the total energy of the probes. Here in this work, we demonstrate a quantum metrology protocol surpassing the Heisenberg limit by probing two groups of independent processes in a superposition of distinct alternative orders. With each process creating a phase space displacement, our setup achieves the super-Heisenberg limit 1/N^2 in the estimation of a geometric phase associated with the two sets of N displacements. In contrast to previous studies, our results only require a single photon probe whose initial energy is independent of N, and are shown to outperform every reported setup where the displacements are probed in a definite order. Our experiment demonstrates indefinite causal order interferometry in a continuous-variable system and opens up experimental investigations of quantum metrology setups boosted by indefinite causal order.

Presenters

  • Peng Yin

    Beijing Academy of Quantum Information Sciences

Authors

  • Peng Yin

    Beijing Academy of Quantum Information Sciences

  • Xiaobin Zhao

    The University of Hong Kong

  • Yuxiang Yang

    The University of Hong Kong

  • Yu Guo

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Wen-Hao Zhang

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Gong-Chu Li

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Yong-Jian Han

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Bi-Heng Liu

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Jin-Shi Xu

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Giulio Chiribella

    The University of Hong Kong; University of Oxford; Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

  • Geng Chen

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Chuan-Feng Li

    University of Science and Technology of China

  • Guang-Can Guo

    University of Science and Technology of China