English

Adaptive quantum metrology with large dynamic range using short one-axis twists

Quantum Physics 2026-03-17 v1

Abstract

Phase estimation with potentially large phase values, i.e., with large dynamic range, has many applications in quantum metrology, for example to atomic clocks. A recently proposed phase estimation scheme approaches the Heisenberg scaling in this global setting using sequences of increasingly squeezed Gaussian states as probes and adaptively chosen, potentially mid-circuit, measurements. In this work, we first observe that the pattern of increase in the squeezing of the probes is applicable even to states with some non-Gaussian features. We then propose an experimentally feasible version of this phase estimation scheme, based on the alternating application of one-axis twist (OAT) operations and rotations. Our protocols are explicitly described in terms of multiple OAT angles whose durations decrease polynomially with system size and spin-squeezing parameters that decay as NμN^{-\mu}, with μ>2/3\mu>2/3 in most cases. Using numerical computation of the system-size dependence NνN^{-\nu} of the Bayesian mean-squared error of an estimator, we show that these states are suitable for use in the phase estimation scheme, and highlight the protocols to achieve ν=17/9\nu=17/9 and 53/2753/27 using two and three OAT operations respectively in the last adaptation stage. We also analyze the limited non-Gaussianity of the resulting probe states and discuss the role of non-Gaussianity in this protocol more generally. Finally, we analyze how robust these protocols are with respect to imperfections such as particle number fluctuations and coherent control fluctuations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2603.14095,
  title  = {Adaptive quantum metrology with large dynamic range using short one-axis twists},
  author = {Tyler G. Thurtell and Akimasa Miyake},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.14095},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

29 pages, 9 figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T11:20:18.606Z