Publication | Open Access
Experimental Test of Heisenberg’s Measurement Uncertainty Relation Based on Statistical Distances
58
Citations
37
References
2016
Year
Measurement TheoryEngineeringMeasurementUncertainty EvaluationQuantum MeasurementUncertainty ModelingQuantum ComputingUncertainty QuantificationExperimental TestQuantum EntanglementStatisticsIncompatible ObservablesMeasurement Uncertainty RelationQuantum ScienceJoint MeasurementQuantum InformationQuantum DecoherenceUncertainty (Quantum Physics)Uncertainty PrincipleStatistical DistancesQubit MeasurementQuantum Error Correction
Incompatible observables can be approximated by compatible observables in joint measurement or measured sequentially, with constrained accuracy as implied by Heisenberg's original formulation of the uncertainty principle. Recently, Busch, Lahti, and Werner proposed inaccuracy trade-off relations based on statistical distances between probability distributions of measurement outcomes [P. Busch et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 160405 (2013); P. Busch et al., Phys. Rev. A 89, 012129 (2014)]. Here we reformulate their theoretical framework, derive an improved relation for qubit measurement, and perform an experimental test on a spin system. The relation reveals that the worst-case inaccuracy is tightly bounded from below by the incompatibility of target observables, and is verified by the experiment employing joint measurement in which two compatible observables designed to approximate two incompatible observables on one qubit are measured simultaneously.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1