On Quantum Reliability Characterizing Systematic Errors in Quantum Sensing
Abstract
Quantum sensing utilize quantum effects, such as entanglement and coherence, to measure physical signals. The performance of a sensing process is characterized by error which requires comparison to a true value. However, in practice, such a true value might be inaccessible. In this study, we utilize quantum reliability as a metric to evaluate quantum sensor's performance based solely on the apparatus itself, without any prior knowledge of true value. We derive a general relationship among reliability, sensitivity, and systematic error, and demonstrate this relationship using a typical quantum sensing process. That is to measure magnetic fields (as a signal) by a spin- particle and using the Stern-Gerlach apparatus to read out the signal information. Our findings illustrate the application of quantum reliability in quantum sensing, opening new perspectives for reliability analysis in quantum systems.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2410.20759,
title = {On Quantum Reliability Characterizing Systematic Errors in Quantum Sensing},
author = {Lian-Xiang Cui and Yi-Mu Du and C. P. Sun},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.20759},
year = {2024}
}
Comments
11 pages, 9 figures