Quantum sensing of temperature close to absolute zero in a Bose-Einstein condensate
Ji-Bing Yuan, Bo Zhang, Ya‐Ju Song, Shi-Qing Tang, Xinwen Wang, Le‐Man Kuang
Abstract
We propose a theoretical scheme for quantum sensing of temperature close to absolute zero in a quasi-one-dimensional Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). In our scheme, a single-atom impurity qubit is used as a temperature sensor. We investigate the sensitivity of the single-atom sensor in estimating the temperature of the BEC. We demonstrate that the sensitivity of the temperature sensor can saturate the quantum Cram\'er-Rao bound by means of measuring quantum coherence of the probe qubit. We study the temperature sensing performance by using quantum signal-to-noise ratio (QSNR). It is indicated that there is an optimal encoding time at which the QSNR can reach its maximum in the full-temperature regime. In particular, we find that the QSNR reaches a finite upper bound in the weak coupling regime even when the temperature is close to absolute zero, which implies that the sensing-error-divergence problem is avoided in our scheme. Our work opens a way for quantum sensing of temperature close to absolute zero in the BEC.