Quantum has recently published: QMetro++ – Python optimization package for large scale quantum metrology with customized strategy structures by Piotr Dulian, Stanisław Kurdziałek, and Rafał Demkowicz-Dobrzáski doi.org/10.22331/q-2...
Quantum has recently published: QMetro++ – Python optimization package for large scale quantum metrology with customized strategy structures by Piotr Dulian, Stanisław Kurdziałek, and Rafał Demkowicz-Dobrzáski doi.org/10.22331/q-2...
The @zotero.org translator for Nature Communications was fixed a while ago, but the problem persisted until recently for other journals, e.g. Nature partner journals (see my post on Zotero's forum from a few months ago: forums.zotero.org/discussion/1... ). This goes deeper than I thought!
5/ Why these things matters: better targets → faster progress → more robust devices in, e.g., photonics & atomic systems.
Funded by the European Union (MSCA PF, QECANM). Views are mine, not the EU’s.
4/ Universal precision bounds for quantum metrology with correlated noise (beyond i.i.d.) valid for general adaptive strategies https://doi.org/10.1103/jy3v-wkcb
3/ A general framework to compute the ultimate precision for measuring multiple parameters of Gaussian quantum states: https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.17873
2/ A numerical framework to understand the precision of time-continuous sensing with inefficient detectors (or other Markovian noise) https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12399 https://doi.org/10.1103/ljh3-3l4j
🧵 As I have recently joined the University of Parma, I want to acknowledge the previous two years spent at @sns.it working on QECANM, a Marie Skłodowska-Curie project on making theoretical quantum sensing closer to the real world. Here’s some of the most interesting outcomes 👇
I have spent a wonderful few days in Pisa, a real highlight of my summer, giving a talk and exploring quantum estimation theory with @falbarelli.bsky.social and Dominic Branford. Fantastic science, great people, and an inspiring setting.
My guess would be mostly out of habit. However, the fact that the second matrix is Hermitian may have some benefits (e.g. specialized numerical routines).
Participation is free of charge, but space is limited. The call for abstracts for oral or poster contributions is now open, with a submission deadline of February 1, 2025.
Simone Felicetti (@simonefelicetti.bsky.social), Roberto Di Candia, and I look forward to seeing you in Pisa!
Workshop announcement!
“Criticality and Continuous Measurements in Quantum Sensing: from Theory to Experiments”
March 24-27, 2025, in Pisa, Italy, at the Scuola Normale Superiore
indico.sns.it/event/81/