Litcius/Paper detail

Quantum metrology with boundary time crystals

Víctor Montenegro, Marco G. Genoni, Abolfazl Bayat, Matteo G. A. Paris

2023Communications Physics56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Quantum sensing is one of the arenas that exemplifies the superiority of quantum technologies over their classical counterparts. Such superiority, however, can be diminished due to unavoidable noise and decoherence of the probe. Thus, metrological strategies to fight against or profit from decoherence are highly desirable. This is the case of certain types of decoherence-driven many-body systems supporting dissipative phase transitions, which might be helpful for sensing. Boundary time crystals are exotic dissipative phases of matter in which the time-translational symmetry is broken, and long-lasting oscillations emerge in open quantum systems at the thermodynamic limit. We show that the transition from a symmetry unbroken into a boundary time crystal phase, described by a second-order transition, reveals quantum-enhanced sensitivity quantified through quantum Fisher information. We also determine the critical exponents of the system and establish their relationship. Our scheme is indeed a demonstration of harnessing decoherence for achieving quantum-enhanced sensitivity. From a practical perspective, it has the advantage of being independent of initialization and can be captured by a simple measurement.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum decoherenceDissipative systemQuantum dissipationPhysicsQuantumQuantum phase transitionQuantum metrologyStatistical physicsQuantum phasesPhase transitionQuantum mechanicsOpen quantum systemObserver (physics)Quantum technologyTheoretical physicsQuantum many-body systemsQuantum Information and CryptographyAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics