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Parameter estimation with one- and two-time measurements on the emission field of the boundary time crystal

Albert Cabot, Federico Carollo, Igor Lesanovsky·March 27, 2025
Quantum Physics

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Abstract

Many-body quantum systems can exhibit collective effects that enhance the sensitivity of parameter estimation protocols. An example is provided by resonantly driven two-level atoms subject to collective dissipation, which can display a transition between a stationary phase and a time-crystal one. Previous work has shown that the light emitted in the time-crystal phase can be harnessed for parameter estimation using continuous monitoring protocols, such as photon counting or homodyne detection, which under ideal conditions yield a quadratic enhancement of sensitivity with the number of particles. In this work, we explore what is the minimal information about the emission field that needs to be accessed in order to resolve collective effects and exploit them for parameter estimation. We show that, for short probing times, a single-time measurement of the emission field already captures the collective behavior emerging at the nonequilibrium transition. In contrast, within the time-crystal phase, exploiting collective effects requires at least two-time measurements. To this end, we introduce a family of correlated intensity measurements that extract the relevant information and can be implemented using an interferometric setup. While the ultimate sensitivity bound remains size independent, as recently established within the framework of noisy quantum metrology, our analysis shows that these protocols utilize collective effects to yield a transient increase in sensitivity with particle number.

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