Detecting changes to sub-diffraction objects with quantum-optimal speed and accuracy
Abstract
Detecting if and when objects change is difficult in passive sub-diffraction imaging of dynamic scenes. We consider the best possible tradeoff between responsivity and accuracy for detecting a change from one arbitrary object model to another in the context of sub-diffraction incoherent imaging. We analytically evaluate the best possible average latency, for a fixed false alarm rate, optimizing over all physically allowed measurements of the optical field collected by a finite 2D aperture. We find that direct focal-plane detection of the incident optical intensity achieves sub-optimal detection latencies compared to the best possible average latency, but that a three-mode spatial-mode demultiplexing measurement in concert with on-line statistical processing using the well-known CUSUM algorithm achieves this quantum limit for sub-diffraction objects. We verify these results via Monte Carlo simulation of the change detection procedure and quantify a growing gap between the conventional and quantum-optimal receivers as the objects are more and more diffraction-limited.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2308.07262,
title = {Detecting changes to sub-diffraction objects with quantum-optimal speed and accuracy},
author = {Michael R Grace and Saikat Guha and Zachary Dutton},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2308.07262},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
4 pages, 3 figures