Abstract
We show a general method to estimate with optimum precision, i.e., the best precision determined by the light-matter interaction process, a set of parameters that characterize a phase object. The method is derived from ideas presented by Pezze []. Our goal is to illuminate the main characteristics of this method as well as its applications to the physics community probably not familiar with the quantum language usually employed in works related to quantum estimation theory. First, we derive precision bounds for the estimation of the set of parameters characterizing the phase object. We compute the Crámer-Rao lower bound for two experimentally relevant types of illumination: a multimode coherent state with mean photon number N and N copies of a multimode single-photon quantum state. We show under which conditions these two models are equivalent. Second, we show that the optimum precision can be achieved by projecting the light reflected or transmitted from the object onto a set of modes with engineered spatial shape. We describe how to construct these modes and demonstrate explicitly that the precision of the estimation using these measurements is optimum. As an example, we apply these results to the estimation of the height and sidewall angle of a cliff-like nanostructure, an object relevant in the semiconductor industry for the evaluation of nanofabrication techniques. Published by the American Physical Society 2024
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