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Phys. Rev. A 65, 043803 (2002) [11 pages]

Adaptive quantum measurements of a continuously varying phase

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D. W. Berry
Department of Physics and Centre for Advanced Computing—Algorithms and Cryptography, Macquarie University, Sydney 2109, Australia

H. M. Wiseman
Centre for Quantum Dynamics, School of Science, Griffith University, Nathan 4111, Australia

Received 2 November 2001; published 14 March 2002

We analyze the problem of quantum-limited estimation of a stochastically varying phase of a continuous beam (rather than a pulse) of the electromagnetic field. We consider both nonadaptive and adaptive measurements, and both dyne detection (using a local oscillator) and interferometric detection. We take the phase variation to be φ̇=√κξ(t), where ξ(t) is δ-correlated Gaussian noise. For a beam of power P, the important dimensionless parameter is N=P/ħωκ, the number of photons per coherence time. For the case of dyne detection, both continuous-wave (cw) coherent beams and cw (broadband) squeezed beams are considered. For a coherent beam a simple feedback scheme gives good results, with a phase variance N-1/2/2. This is 2 times smaller than that achievable by nonadaptive (heterodyne) detection. For a squeezed beam a more accurate feedback scheme gives a variance scaling as N-2/3, compared to N-1/2 for heterodyne detection. For the case of interferometry only a coherent input into one port is considered. The locally optimal feedback scheme is identified, and it is shown to give a variance scaling as N-1/2. It offers a significant improvement over nonadaptive interferometry only for N of order unity.

© 2002 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevA.65.043803
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevA.65.043803
PACS:
42.50.Dv, 42.50.Lc, 03.67.Hk