Abstract

In this paper, we consider the application of quantum reservoir engineering in quantum metrology. More precisely, we are concerned with a system setup where a sequence of atoms constructing the “time-varying” quantum reservoir interact, in turn, with the trapped field in a cavity through the Jaynes–Cummings Hamiltonian. In particular, we were able to manipulate the initial states of reservoir atoms in order to enhance estimation precision regarding the coupling strength between each atom and the cavity (the coupling strength between each atom and the cavity was assumed to be identical). The novelty of this work lies in alternately preparing the atoms at two different states in a pairwise manner, such that the cavity could converge into a squeezed state with photonic loss to the environment taken into account. The control scheme proposed here thus leads to higher precision compared to the previous work where reservoir atoms were initialized at the same state, which drove the cavity to a coherent state. Detailed theoretical analysis and numerical simulations are also provided. In addition, this system setup and the associated control scheme are easily implemented for quantum metrology, since no entanglement is required for the preparation of atom states, and the final cavity state can stay steady.

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