The Heisenberg limit of quantum measurement where the measurement precision scales as N-1 with the number of atoms N can be achieved by introducing quantum correlations between the atoms. In the present work, we show how to reach Heisenberg scaling by implementing a new Ramsey measurement scheme for cold-atom metrological devices. The proposed protocol consists of a sequence of one-axis twisting pulses and total collective spin rotations. It results in the creation of atomic Schrödinger-cat states, a superposition of two coherent spin states. Analyzing the Fisher information, we discuss the main features of the states and their interferometric precision.
State of the art atomic sensors operate near the standard quantum limit (SQL) of projection noise, and overcoming this limit by using atom-atom entanglement such as spin squeezing is a major goal in quantum metrology. By coupling an ensemble of approximately 1000 Yb-171 atoms to a high-finesse asymmetric micromirror cavity with single-atom cooperativity of 1.8., we produce a near-unitary spin squeezed state. The observed spin noise suppression and metrological gain are limited by the state readout to 9.4(4) dB and 6.5(4) dB, respectively, while the generated states offer a spin noise suppression of 15.9(6) dB and a metrological gain of 12.9(6) dB over the standard quantum limit, limited by the curvature of the Bloch sphere. When requiring the squeezing process to be within 30% of unitarity, we demonstrate an interferometer that improves the averaging time over the SQL by a factor of 3.7(2).
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