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We seek for the optimal strategy to infer the width $a$ of an infinite potential wells by performing measurements on the particle(s) contained in the well. In particular, we address quantum estimation theory as the proper framework to formulate the problem and find the optimal quantum measurement, as well as to evaluate the ultimate bounds to precision. Our results show that in a static framework the best strategy is to measure position on a delocalized particle, corresponding to a width-independent quantum signal-to-noise ratio (QSNR), which increases with delocalisation. Upon considering time-evolution inside the well, we find that QSNR increases as $t^2$. On the other hand, it decreases with $a$ and thus time-evolution is a metrological resource only when the width is not too large compared to the available time evolution. Finally, we consider entangled probes placed into the well and observe super-additivity of the QSNR: it is the sum of the single-particle QSNRs, plus a positive definite term, which depends on their preparation and may increase with the number of entangled particles. Overall, entanglement represents a resource for the precise characterization of potential wells.
Quantum thermodynamics has emerged as a separate sub-discipline, revising the concepts and laws of thermodynamics, at the quantum scale. In particular, there has been a disruptive shift in the way thermometry, and thermometers are perceived and desig
We review the most recent developments in the theory of open quantum systems focusing on situations in which the reservoir memory effects, due to long-lasting and non-negligible correlations between system and environment, play a crucial role. These
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Quantum illumination is the task of determining the presence of an object in a noisy environment. We determine the optimal continuous variable states for quantum illumination in the limit of zero object reflectivity. We prove that the optimal single
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