Publication | Open Access
Can a Quantum Nondemolition Measurement Improve the Sensitivity of an Atomic Magnetometer?
149
Citations
8
References
2004
Year
EngineeringMeasurementMagnetic ResonanceQuantum MeasurementQuantum SensingMagnetic SensorQuantum ComputingQuantum EntanglementInstrumentationQuantum SciencePhotonicsPhysicsMagnetic MeasurementAtomic MagnetometerIdealized Atomic MagnetometerQuantum OpticOptical RotationNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsQuantum Projection Noise
We consider the limitations due to noise (e.g., quantum projection noise and photon shot-noise) on the sensitivity of an idealized atomic magnetometer that utilizes spin squeezing induced by a continuous quantum nondemolition measurement. Such a magnetometer measures spin precession of N atomic spins by detecting optical rotation of far-detuned light. We show that for very short measurement times, the optimal sensitivity scales as N(-3/4); if strongly squeezed probe light is used, the Heisenberg limit of N-1 scaling can be achieved. However, if the measurement time exceeds tau(rel)/N(1/2) in the former case, or tau(rel)/N in the latter, where tau(rel) is the spin relaxation time, the scaling becomes N(-1/2), as for a standard shot-noise-limited magnetometer.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1