Quantum Cramér–Rao bound

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The quantum Cramér–Rao bound is the quantum analogue of the classical Cramér–Rao bound. It bounds the achievable precision in parameter estimation with a quantum system:

(Δθ)21mFQ[ϱ,H],

where m is the number of independent repetitions, and FQ[ϱ,H] is the quantum Fisher information.[1][2]

Here, ϱ is the state of the system and H is the Hamiltonian of the system. When considering a unitary dynamics of the type

ϱ(θ)=exp(iHθ)ϱ0exp(+iHθ),

where ϱ0 is the initial state of the system, θ is the parameter to be estimated based on measurements on ϱ(θ).

Simple derivation from the Heisenberg uncertainty relation

Let us consider the decomposition of the density matrix to pure components as

ϱ=kpk|ΨkΨk|.

The Heisenberg uncertainty relation is valid for all |Ψk

(ΔA)Ψk2(ΔB)Ψk214|i[A,B]Ψk|2.

From these, employing the Cauchy-Schwarz inequality we arrive at [3]

(Δθ)A214min{pk,Ψk}[kpk(ΔB)Ψk2].

Here [4]

(Δθ)A2=(ΔA)2|θA|2=(ΔA)2|i[A,B]|2

is the error propagation formula, which roughly tells us how well θ can be estimated by measuring A. Moreover, the convex roof of the variance is given as[5][6]

min{pk,Ψk}[kpk(ΔB)Ψk2]=14FQ[ϱ,B],

where FQ[ϱ,B] is the quantum Fisher information.

References

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