A2 Refereed review article in a scientific journal

Measurement uncertainty relations: characterising optimal error bounds for qubits




AuthorsBullock T, Busch P

PublisherIOP PUBLISHING LTD

Publication year2018

JournalJournal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF PHYSICS A-MATHEMATICAL AND THEORETICAL

Journal acronymJ PHYS A-MATH THEOR

Article number283001

Volume51

Issue28

Number of pages34

ISSN1751-8113

eISSN1751-8121

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8121/aac729


Abstract
In standard formulations of the uncertainty principle, two fundamental features are typically cast as impossibility statements: two noncommuting observables cannot in general both be sharply defined (for the same state), nor can they be measured jointly. The pioneers of quantum mechanics were acutely aware and puzzled by this fact, and it motivated Heisenberg to seek a mitigation, which he formulated in his seminal paper of 1927. He provided intuitive arguments to show that the values of, say, the position and momentum of a particle can at least be unsharply defined, and they can be measured together provided some approximation errors are allowed. Only now, nine decades later, a working theory of approximate joint measurements is taking shape, leading to rigorous and experimentally testable formulations of associated error tradeoff relations. Here we briefly review this new development, explaining the concepts and steps taken in the construction of optimal joint approximations of pairs of incompatible observables. As a case study, we deduce measurement uncertainty relations for qubit observables using two distinct error measures. We provide an operational interpretation of the error bounds and discuss some of the first experimental tests of such relations.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:17