arXiv:1310.3177 [quant-ph]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Reduced back-action for phase sensitivity 10 times beyond the standard quantum limit
Justin G. Bohnet, Kevin C. Cox, Matthew A. Norcia, Joshua M. Weiner, Zilong Chen, James K. Thompson
Published 2013-10-11Version 1
Collective measurements can project a system into an entangled state with enhanced sensitivity for measuring a quantum phase, but measurement back-action has limited previous efforts to only modest improvements. Here we use a collective measurement to produce and directly observe, with no background subtraction, an entangled, spin-squeezed state with phase resolution improved in variance by a factor of 10.5(1.5), or 10.2(6) dB, compared to the initially unentangled ensemble of N = 4.8 x 10^5 87Rb atoms. The measurement uses a cavity-enhanced probe of an optical cycling transition to mitigate back-action associated with state-changing transitions induced by the probe. This work establishes collective measurements as a powerful technique for generating entanglement for precision measurement, with potential impacts in biological sensing, communication, navigation, and tests of fundamental physics.