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Scientific Reports logoLink to Scientific Reports
. 2021 Mar 29;11:7128. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-86461-2

Hilbert–Schmidt speed as an efficient figure of merit for quantum estimation of phase encoded into the initial state of open n-qubit systems

Hossein Rangani Jahromi 1, Rosario Lo Franco 2,
PMCID: PMC8007828  PMID: 33782438

Abstract

Hilbert–Schmidt speed (HSS) is a special type of quantum statistical speed which is easily computable, since it does not require diagonalization of the system state. We find that, when both HSS and quantum Fisher information (QFI) are calculated with respect to the phase parameter encoded into the initial state of an n-qubit register, the zeros of the HSS dynamics are actually equal to those of the QFI dynamics. Moreover, the signs of the time-derivatives of both HSS and QFI exactly coincide. These findings, obtained via a thorough investigation of several paradigmatic open quantum systems, show that HSS and QFI exhibit the same qualitative time evolution. Therefore, HSS reveals itself as a powerful figure of merit for enhancing quantum phase estimation in an open quantum system made of n qubits. Our results also provide strong evidence for both contractivity of the HSS under memoryless dynamics and its sensitivity to system-environment information backflows to detect the non-Markovianity in high-dimensional systems, as suggested in previous studies.

Subject terms: Quantum information, Quantum mechanics, Quantum metrology, Qubits

Introduction

The process of quantum parameter estimation typically consists in preparing the probe system in an initial state, letting it interact with the target system to encode the information about the unknown parameter, then measuring the probe to extract the information and finally estimate the parameter. It should be noted that in this process, the system also may be affected by different noises. Provided that the physical mechanism governing the system dynamics is known, one may deduce a value of the parameter, with a given precision, by comparison between the input and the output states of the probe1,2.

Phase estimation is at the heart of quantum metrology215 due to the fact that, in many technological areas, the parameter estimation problem can be reduced to determining a phase shift induced in the quantum state of the probe. Measuring an unknown phase has many significant applications in different scenarios, some of them being gravitational wave observation1619, test-mass position measurements20, frequency standards21, gravimeters22,23 and detection of weak signals or defects resulting in the design of very sensitive sensors24. In these scenarios an interferometric scheme is typically used to implement the quantum phase estimation, as happens for optical interferometry in gravitational wave detectors25, atomic interferometry in Ramsey spectroscopy and physical law testing13, optical imaging or laser gyroscopes2 to name a few. All of these applications usually aim at optimal estimation of a relative phase gathered by the signal along one arm of the interferometer26.

According to the quantum Cramér-Rao theorem, the precision of quantum phase estimation is bounded by the inverse of the quantum Fisher information (QFI)4,2729, which thus represents a central quantity in quantum metrology. In fact, evaluation of the QFI provides the ultimate quantum limits to measurement precision and consequently a general benchmark to assess quantum metrological protocols. The QFI is also a measure of quantum statistical speed that quantifies the sensitivity of an initial state with respect to changes of the parameter which should be estimated. In general, each measure of statistical distance naturally leads to a statistical speed for parametric evolutions of classical probability distributions or quantum states. This statistical speed can be obtained by the change in distance originated from a small variation of this parameter (i.e., the derivative of the distance). The quantum statistical speed is then obtained by maximizing over the classical statistical speed over all quantum measurements30.

Inspired by the fact that the QFI is a measure of quantum statistical speed, obtained from the Hellinger distance31, here we investigate the application of the Hilbert–Schmidt speed (HSS), another quantifier of quantum statistical speed, in the process of quantum phase estimation. Because calculating the QFI for high-dimensional quantum systems is typically complicated32, it is useful to inquire the efficiency of the HSS, which is an easily computable quantity having the advantage of avoiding diagonalization of the evolved density matrix, in the quantum estimation theory. In this paper, we show that the HSS can be indeed exploited as a powerful and convenient figure of merit in quantum metrology for n-qubit systems. This result gains particular attention considering the fact that many quantum information protocols are designed by n-qubit registers.

Results

Preliminaries: quantum Fisher information (QFI)

We start our analysis by recalling the general formulation leading to defining a kind of quantum statistical speed by which the quantum Fisher information (QFI) can be characterized.

First, we consider the (classical) Hellinger distance31

[d(p,q)]2=12x|px-qx|2, 1

where p={px}x and q={qx}x represent the probability distributions, i.e., probabilities of occurrence of different possible outcomes for two different experiments. Here the random variable x is assumed to take only discrete values. Formally, in order to achieve the statistical speed from a given statistical distance, one should quantify the distance between infinitesimally close distributions taken from a one-parameter family px(φ) with parameter φ. In other words, the statistical speed versus a special parameter is defined as the change in the corresponding distance originated from a small variation of the parameter. Following this prescription and performing a Taylor expansion at φ0 for small values of φ, we find that the classical statistical speed associated with the (classical) Hellinger distance is given by

s[p(φ0)]ddφd(p(φ0+φ),p(φ0))=f(p(φ0))8, 2

where

f(p(φ))=xpx(φ)(lnpx(φ)φ)2, 3

denotes the Fisher information4,28.

Extending these classical notions to the quantum case and considering a given pair of quantum states ρ and σ, one may write px=Tr{Exρ} and qx=Tr{Exσ} representing the measurement probabilities associated with the positive-operator-valued measure (POVM) defined by the set {Ex0} which satisfies xEx=I. The associated quantum distance can be obtained by maximizing the (classical) Hellinger distance over all possible choices of POVMs33, that is

D(ρ,σ)=max{Ex}d(p,q)=1-F(ρ,σ), 4

called the Bures distance28 in which F(ρ,σ)Trρσρ denotes the state fidelity34. Now, the quantum statistical speed28 can be defined as

S[ρ(φ0)]ddφD(ρ(φ0+φ),ρ(φ0))=F(ρ(φ0))8, 5

in which the QFI F(ρ(φ)) appears and is given by1,5,6,28

F(ρ(φ))Fφ=i,j2λi+λj|ϕi|φρφ|ϕj|2=i(φλi)2λi+2ij(λi-λj)2λi+λj|ϕi|φϕj|2, 6

where |ϕi and λi denote, respectively, the eigenvectors and eigenvalues of the density matrix ρφ. In fact, the QFI is obtained by maximizing the Fisher information over all possible POVMs4, that is

F(ρ(φ))=max{Ex}f(p(φ)), 7

where p(φ)={px(φ)}x and px(φ)=Tr{Exρ(φ)}. The fundamental relationship between the QFI and its corresponding quantum bound is expressed by the quantum Cramér-Rao bound28

ΔφQCR=1F(ρ(φ)), 8

which sets the precision limit for quantum estimation of unknown parameter φ: ΔφΔφQCR.

Preliminaries: Hilbert–Schmidt speed (HSS)

We now report the definition of the Hilbert–Schmidt speed (HSS). Introducing the distance measure30

[d(p,q)]2=12x|px-qx|2, 9

where p={px}x as well as q={qx}x are probability distributions, and subsequently considering the classical statistical speed

s[p(φ0)]=ddφd(p(φ0+φ),p(φ0)), 10

one can define a special kind of quantum statistical speed which is called HSS. Following the procedure discussed in the previous subsection for obtaining the corresponding quantum relations, one can determine the Hilbert–Schmidt distance35

D(ρ,σ)max{Ex}d(ρ,σ)=12Tr[(ρ-σ)2], 11

not requiring the diagonalization of the argument operator. The corresponding quantum statistical speed is just the HSS given by30

HSS(ρ(φ))HSSφS[ρ(φ)]=max{Ex}s[p(φ)]=12Tr[(dρ(φ)dφ)2], 12

which can be computed without diagonalizing dρ(φ)/dφ. This is a significant advantage from a computational perspective.

Quantum estimation through HSS

Because both QFI and HSS are quantum statistical speeds associated, respectively, with the Bures and Hilbert–Schmidt distances, it is reasonable to investigate how they can be related to each other. Based on analytical and numerical calculation, we find that an important relationship exists between them. We summarize our main result in the following.

Main Result. Suppose that we are given a pure initial state of an n-qubit quantum register such as

|ψ0=Nj=1deiφjcj|j, 13

where N=1/j|cj|2 is the normalization factor and |j,j=1,,d denotes the computational basis of the collective Hilbert space of dimension d. Then, let this state be affected by an arbitrary quantum channel Et giving the output state ρt=Et(|ψ0ψ0|). Under these conditions, we find that HSSφjHSS(ρt(φj)) and FφjF(ρt(φj)), computed with respect to phase parameter φj encoded into the input state of Eq. (13), exhibit the same qualitative dynamics, that is:

  • (i)

    if HSSφj0, one has sgndHSSφjdt=sgndFφjdt, where sgn(x) indicates the sign of the argument x.

  • (ii)

    HSSφj=0Fφj=0.

Notice that the relation (i) above immediately implies that maxima and minima times of QFI and HSS coincide. Therefore, by investigating the HSS dynamics we can faithfully detect the instants when the optimal phase estimation is achieved.

The sanity check of these relationships is performed by presenting various physical examples in the following subsections. It should be noted that using the general hierarchy between the HSS and QFI discussed in the context of quantum statistical speeds30, one can show that 0HSSφjFφj, hence Fφj=0 leads to HSSφj=0. However, the reverse (i.e., detecting the QFI zeros through the HSS zeros, which is the study of this paper) cannot be extracted from the above general inequality. Our subsequent analysis just confirms that if HSS vanishes then QFI also vanishes, leading to our main result. We also point out that, in the following, the special choice of the initial state of the system is chosen in order to simplify the analytical expressions of the QFI and the HSS. It is emphasized that our main result is independent of which one of the phase parameters φj appearing in Eq. (13) is estimated. The results along the manuscript are general and hold for any other choices of the initial state where a relative phase parameter appears.

One-qubit system

First we focus on the paradigmatic one-qubit system where the qubit interacts with a dissipative reservoir (cavity), as depicted in Fig. 1, through the Hamiltonian (ħ=1)36

H=ω0σ+σ-+kωkbkbk+(σ+B+σ-B), 14

where ω0 is the transition frequency of the qubit, σ± represent the system raising and lowering operators, ωk is the frequency of the k-th field mode of the reservoir, bk (bk) denotes the k-mode annihilation (creation) operator, and B=kgkbk with gk being the coupling constant with the k-th mode. The cavity is initially in the vacuum state and uncorrelated from the qubit. Consider then the qubit prepared in the initial state

|ψ0=cosθ2|1+eiφsinθ2|0, 15

where the parameter φ is the one to be estimated, while θ just fixes the probability amplitudes in the quantum superposition.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Sketch of a single qubit of transition frequency ω0 embedded in a dissipative zero-temperature cavity, with spectral width λ (rate of photon losses). The qubit is initially prepared in a given superposition of its two states, with a relative phase parameter φ. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

In the limit of a continuum of reservoir modes k|gk|2dωJ(ω)δ(ωk-ω), where J(ω) denotes the reservoir spectral density36,37. Restricting ourselves to the case of a single excitation in the atom-cavity system, we find that the cavity mode can be eliminated in favour of an effective spectral density of the following form36

J(ω)=12πγ0λ2(ω0-ω)2+λ2. 16

where parameter λ, connected to the reservoir correlation time τc by τc1/λ, represents the spectral width for the qubit-reservoir coupling. Moreover, the decay rate γ0 is related to the system (qubit) relaxation time scale τr, over which the state of the system changes, by means of τr=1/γ0.

From the Hamiltonian of Eq. (14), at zero temperature and in the strong-coupling regime with the above Lorentzian spectral density for the cavity modes, one finds that the dynamics of the qubit in the basis {|1,|0} is described by the evolved reduced density matrix36,38

ρS(t)=Pt2cosθ+1Pt2e-iφsinθPt2eiφsinθ1-Pt2cosθ+1, 17

where the coherence characteristic function P(t) is

P(t)=e-λtcos(Γt/2)+(λ/Γ)sin(Γt/2)2, 18

with Γ=2γ0λ-λ2.

Inserting the time-dependent density matrix of Eq. (17) into Eqs. (6) and (12), we find that the QFI and HSS associated with an initial phase φ are, respectively, given by

Fφ(t)=Ptsin2θ,HSSφ(t)=Pt2sinθ, 19

leading to the relations

Fφ=4(HSSφ)2dFφdt=(8HSSφ)dHSSφdt. 20

Accordingly, we see that when the HSS vanishes, the QFI also equals zero. Moreover, at all times when HSSφ0, the signs of dFφ/dt and dHSSφ/dt coincide (HSS is a nonnegative quantity) and hence they exhibit the same qualitative dynamics. In particular, the times when the optimal estimation is achieved, i.e., dFφ/dt=0 (maximum points of the QFI), can be easily detected by looking at the HSS dynamics.

Two-qubit systems

The validity of our main result is here discussed for two-qubit systems in three different scenarios: local coupling to independent environments, coupling to a common environment, teleportation of entanglement between the two qubits.

Coupling to independent environments

We consider a composite quantum system which consists of two separated identical qubits independently interacting with their own zero-temperature dissipative reservoir, as illustrated in Fig. 2. The two local qubit-reservoir interactions are assumed to be the same, for the sake of simplicity and without losing any generality. The two cavities (reservoirs), each exhibiting a Lorentzian spectral density, are initially in the vacuum state and uncorrelated from the two-qubit system. Knowing the evolved density matrix of the single qubit discussed in previous subsection, one can easily obtain the density matrix evolution of the two independent qubits3840. In the computational basis {|11,|10,|01,|00}, we take the two qubits initially prepared in the state

|ψ0=13(eiφ|10+|01+|00), 21

with the phase parameter φ, giving rise to the evolved reduced density matrix

ρS(t)=00000Pt3Pt3eiφPt3eiφ0Pt3e-iφPt3Pt30Pt3e-iφPt31-2Pt3, 22

where Pt[0,1] is the coherence characteristic function of Eq. (18).

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Sketch of two separated identical qubits each one interacting with its own zero-temperature dissipative cavity Ci (i=1,2). The initial state of the two qubits is such that a relative phase parameter φ appears between two-qubit basis states. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

Computing the QFI of Eq. (6) and the HSS of Eq. (12) with respect to the phase parameter φ, one promptly gets, respectively, the expressions

Fφ(t)=89Pt,HSSφ(t)=13Pt(Pt+1), 23

leading to

Fφ=49(1+36HSSφ2-1)dFφdt=16HSSφ1+36HSSφ2dHSSφdt. 24

The expressions above show once again our main result. In fact, assuming that HSSφj0, we have that the two time derivatives dHSSφj/dt) and dFφj/dt) have the same sign. In addition, at times when HSSφj=0, the QFI also vanishes and hence no information can be extracted from the system. Similar expressions would be obtained for different choices of the two-qubit initial state.

Coupling to a common environment

We study two separated qubits interacting with a common zero-temperature bosonic reservoir, as depicted in Fig. 3. In such a case, the interaction between the two qubits is not direct but mediated by the common quantum reservoir. The total Hamiltonian of the system plus the reservoir is written as H=H0+Hint, with41

H0=ω1σ+(1)σ-(1)+ω2σ+(2)σ-(2)+kωkbkbk,(unperturbed Hamiltonian)Hint=(α1σ+(1)+α2σ+(2))B+(α1σ-(1)+α2σ-(2))B,(interaction Hamiltonian) 25

where σ±(j) and ωj denote, respectively, inversion operator and transition frequency of the j-th qubit (j=1,2), bk (bk) represents the k-mode creation (annihilation) operator of quanta (photons) of the environment, and B=kgkbk in which gk is the coupling constant with the k-th mode. Moreover, the interaction of the j-th qubit with the reservoir is quantified by the dimensionless constant αj depending on the value of the cavity field at the qubit position, which can be effectively controlled by means of dc Stark shifts tuning the atomic transition in and out of resonance. We investigate the case when the two atomic qubits interact resonantly with the reservoir described by a Lorentzian spectral density and they have the same transition frequency, i.e., ω1=ω2=ω0.

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Illustration of two separated qubits both interacting with a zero-temperature common dissipative cavity. The initial state of the qubits is such that a relative phase parameter φ appears between the two-qubit basis states. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

It is useful to introduce a collective coupling constant αT=α12+α22, the relative strengths rj=αj/αT such that r12+r22=1, and mutually orthogonal quantum states

|ψ+=r1|10+r2|01,|ψ-=r2|10-r1|01. 26

The cavity is initially in its vacuum state |0=k|0k, uncorrelated from the two-qubit system. With these definitions, for an initial two-qubit state of the form

|ψ0=12(|10+eiφ|01), 27

one finds that the evolved reduced density matrix of the two-qubit system in the computational basis {|11,|10,|01,|00} is given by41

ρ(t)=00000|c1(t)|2c1(t)c2(t)00c1(t)c2(t)|c2(t)|200001-|c1(t)|2-|c2(t)|2, 28

where, defining β±=ψ±|ψ0, one has

c1(t)=r2β-+r1Ftβ+,c2(t)=-r1β-+r2Ftβ+. 29

Moreover, introducing the dimensionless quantities τ=λt and R=R/λ, where 1/λ is the reservoir correlation time and R denotes the vacuum Rabi frequency, one obtains

Fτ=e-τ/2coshτ21-4R2+11-4R2sinhτ21-4R2. 30

The above equations allow us to calculate the relevant quantities for our study, that is QFI and HSS. The QFI can be computed analytically but its expression is too cumbersome to be presented here. On the other hand, we find that the HSS is given by

HSSφ(t)=12r12+r22Ft2r14-2Ft2-12r12r22cos2φ+2Ft4-Ft2+1r12r22+Ft2r24. 31

The dynamical comparison between the two figures of merit is then performed by plots. In particular, we show in Fig. 4 that both the QFI and HSS dynamics simultaneously exhibit an oscillatory behavior such that their maximum and minimum points exactly coincide. This plot qualitatively verifies our result that the HSS can detect exactly the times at which the best phase estimation occurs (maximum of the QFI). Therefore, also for this system, the HSS, similarly to QFI, can be used as a distinguishability metric on the space of quantum states which quantifies the maximum amount of information on an unknown phase parameter attainable by a given probe state.

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Dynamics of quantum Fisher information Fφ(t) (red solid line) and Hilbert–Schmidt speed HSSφ(t) (amplified by 1.4 times for comparison, blue dashed line), as a function of the dimensionless time τ for the two-qubits system coupled to a common reservoir, with r1=0.3 and R=8. Notice that Fφ(t) approximately oscillates between 0.3 and 1 due to the special choice of the initial parameters.

Two-qubit entanglement teleportation

We now study the relationship between QFI and HSS within the scenario of noisy two-qubit teleportation, where a two-qubit entangled state is to be teleported from a place to another42,43. Let us first describe the noisy two-qubit system to this aim, which shall constitute the resource channel for the teleportation.

One of the most important noise models used in the low-temperature regime is described by a spin environment44,45. In particular, in order to achieve suitable operations in experiments performed to study macroscopic quantum coherence and decoherence, one requires temperatures close to absolute zero. Here we consider a two-qubit system interacting with an external environment composed of N spins. The general Hamiltonian is written as H=HS+HE+HI where the system, environment and interaction Hamiltonians are given, respectively, by44,45

HS=ħΩ12σz1+ħΩ22σz2+γσz1σz2,HE=i=1Nhiσxi,HI=σz1n=1Nεiσzi+σz2n=1Nλiσzi, 32

where Ωi and γ denote, respectively, the characteristic frequency of the i-th qubit and the coupling strength between the two spin qubits. Moreover, hi denotes the tunneling matrix element for the i-th environmental spin, while εi (λi) represents the coupling between qubit 1 (qubit 2) and the spins of the environment.

Initializing the two-qubit system in an extended Werner-like state40

ρ(0)=1-r4I4+r|ϑϑ|, 33

where r(0,1] quantifies the degree of purity of the state, I4 is the 4×4 identity matrix and

|ϑ=1-p|00+p|11,(0p1), 34

one finds that the evolved reduced density matrix in the two-qubit computational basis {|00,|01,|10,|11} is given by45

ρ(t)=1-r4+r(1-p)00rp(1-p)e-i(Ω1+Ω2)tQ(t)01-r400001-r40rp(1-p)ei(Ω1+Ω2)tQ(t)001-r4+rp, 35

where the decoherence factor Q(t) is

Q(t)=i=1N1-2(εi+λi)2hi2+(εi+λi)2sin2(thi2+(εi+λi)2). 36

Assuming that the two qubits are shared between Alice (location A) and Bob (location B), we use two copies of this system state as a resource channel for the teleportation of an unknown entangled state ρin from A to B, according to a basic scheme42 illustrated in Fig. 5. It is useful to introduce the Bell states Bi’s associated with the Pauli matrices σi’s by

Bi=σ0σiB0σ0σi,(i=1,2,3), 37

where σ0=I2 (I2 being the 2×2 identity matrix), σ1=σx, σ2=σy, σ3=σz and B0=12|00+|1100|+11|. Now, one can generalize the standard teleportation protocol42 and find that the output state of the two-qubit teleportation is43

ρout=ijpijσiσjρinσiσj,(i,j=0,1,2,3), 38

where pij=TrBiρresTrBjρres, ρres being the resource state for the teleportation which is equal to the reduced density matrix of Eq. (35) in our model. Accordingly, for the input state ρin=|ψinψin| with

|ψin=cos(θ/2)|10+sin(θ/2)eiφ|01, 39

where 0θπ,0φ2π, we find that the output state of the teleportation is given by

ρout(t)=4R2+2Rr00004Rr+r2sin2θ2+4R22eiφsinθA2(t)cos2(Ω1+Ω2)002e-iφsinθA2(t)cos2(Ω1+Ω2)4Rr+r2cos2θ2+4R200004R2+2Rr, 40

with R=(1-r)/4 and A(t)=rQ(t)p(1-p). Using this expression for the output state, we find that the QFI and HSS associated to the phase parameter φ encoded into the input state ρin sent into the teleportation channel are, respectively,

Fφ(t)=32A4(t)cos4(Ω1+Ω2)sin2θ1+r2,HSSφ(t)=2A2(t)cos2(Ω1+Ω2)sinθ. 41

From these expressions we straightforwardly obtain

Fφ=8HSSφ21+r2dFφdt=16HSSφ1+r2dHSSφdt, 42

leading to our main result, i.e., the possibility of extracting the QFI dynamics through the HSS dynamics due to the fact that the two figures of merit have the same qualitative time behavior.

Figure 5.

Figure 5

Sketch of the noisy two-qubit teleportation protocol. Two copies of the evolved noisy two-qubit state ρ(t) are employed as resource channel for the protocol, shared between the two locations A and B. The input state ρin to be teleported, containing information about the phase parameter φ, is manipulated in location A. After the protocol, the state ρout is teleported at the location B encoded in the two qubits coming from the resource state42. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

General case: n-qubit system (n3)

Now the validity of the main result is investigated for high-dimensional systems in two scenarios: local coupling to independent environments and coupling to a common environment.

Coupling to independent environments

Here we analyze the case of an open quantum system made of n noninteracting qubits locally subject to their own reservoir, a typical configuration for quantum networking with quantum registers. To this aim, one has to choose the type of qubit and the local qubit-environment interaction.

We specifically consider the dynamics of a topological qubit realized by two Majorana modes which are generated at the endpoints of some nanowire with strong spin-orbit interaction, placed on top of an s-wave superconductor and driven by an external magnetic field B along the wire axis direction46,47. We also assume that each Majorana mode is coupled to the metallic nanowire via a tunnel junction in the way that the tunneling strength is controllable by an external gate voltage. The total Hamiltonian is written as

H=HS+HE+V 43

where HS denotes the Hamiltonian of the topological qubit, V represents the system-environment interaction Hamiltonian, while HE is the environment Hamiltonian whose elementary constituents can be considered as electrons or holes. The decoherence which affects the topological qubit is modeled as a fermionic Ohmic-like environment described by spectral density J(ω)ωQ with Q0. The Ohmic, super-Ohmic and sub-Ohmic environments are characterized by Q=1, Q>1 and Q<1, respectively. Since these Majorana modes used as the topological qubit are zero-energy modes, we have HS=0. Moreover, the interaction Hamiltonian V, constructed by the electron creation (annihilation) operators with Majorana modes γ1 and γ2, satisfies the properties

γa=γa,{γa,γb}=2δab,(a,b=1,2). 44

Before turning on the interaction V, the two Majorana modes construct a topological (non-local) qubit with states |0 and |1 related to each other by

12(γ1-iγ2)|0=|1,12(γ1+iγ2)|1=|0, 45

where γ1, γ2 are chosen to be represented by γ1=σ1, γ2=σ2, iγ1γ2=σ3, in which σj’s are the usual Pauli matrices.

Let us now assume, as usual, that the state ϱT of the total qubit-environment system is uncorrelated initially: ϱT(0)=ϱ(0)ϱE, where ρS(0) and ρE are the initial density matrices of the topological qubit and of its environment, respectively. Supposing that the initial state of the Majorana qubit is written as

ϱ(0)=ϱ11(0)ϱ12(0)ϱ21(0)ϱ22(0), 46

one finds that the reduced density matrix of the topological qubit at time t can be obtained by a dynamical map Φt such that (for details, see Ref.46)

ϱ(t)=Φt(ϱ(0))=121+(2ϱ11(0)-1)α2(t)2ϱ12(0)α(t)2ϱ21(0)α(t)1+(2ϱ22(0)-1)α2(t), 47

where

α(t)=e-2B2|β|IQ(t),β-4πΓ(Q+1)1Γ0Q+1,IQ(t)=2Γ0Q-1Γ(Q-12)[1-1F1(Q-12;12;-t2Γ024)],Q1,12t2Γ022F2({1,1};{3/2,2};-t2Γ024),Q=1, 48

with Γ0 indicating the high-frequency cutoff for the linear spectrum of the edge state, Γ(z) representing the Gamma function, and pFq being the generalized hypergeometric function . From the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of the Choi matrix48 of the map Φt, we obtain the corresponding operator-sum representation ϱ(t)=i=14Ki(t)ϱ(0)Ki(t) with Kraus operators {Ki(t)} given by

K1(t)=α-12001-α2,K2(t)=α+1200α+12,K3(t)=01-α2200,K4(t)=001-α220. 49

In the following, we take a system formed by n noninteracting topological qubits Si (each one defined by two Majorana modes as above) such that each qubit locally interacts with the environment Ei described above by the interaction Vi (i=1,2,,n), as displayed in Fig. 6. Note that the effects of the environment on each of the qubits can be canceled by setting the corresponding external magnetic field B to zero. With this in mind, we focus on the scenarios in which m of the qubits are affected by the noise, while the remaining ones (n-m) are noiseless. Since the environments are independent in our model, the Kraus operators are just tensor products of Kraus operators acting on each of the qubits, noting that the Kraus operators of the noiseless qubits are set to identity operator38,49.

Figure 6.

Figure 6

Illustration of a system of n noninteracting topological qubits Si (i=1,2,,n), each one built by two Majorana modes γ2i-1 and γ2i (only γ1, γ2 are explicitly indicated for simplicity), locally interacting by Vi to the environment Ei (constituted by electrons and holes). The n qubits are initially prepared in a state containing relative phase parameters φj between the computational basis states. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

We start by considering a three-qubit system (n=3) with m=3, initially prepared in the W-like state50

|W3=13eiφ1|100+|010+eiφ2|001, 50

where two phase parameters φ1, φ2 appear. We find that the QFI and HSS associated with phase parameter φ1 is obtained as

Fφ1(t)=295-2α2(t)+1,HSSφ1(t)=α2(t)+132. 51

It is easily found that

Fφ1(t)=109-2227HSSφ1(t)dFφ1dt=2227(HSSφ1)2dHSSφ1dt. 52

As clear from Eq. (51), the HSS is always nonzero and we conclude that the QFI dynamics can be completely determined by analyzing the HSS dynamics: our main result is once again proved. Now we compute the measures associated with the phase parameter φ2, leading to the expressions

Fφ2(t)=16α2(t)9α2(t)+9,HSSφ2(t)=2α(t)3, 53

from which we obtain

Fφ2(t)=16(HSSφ2(t))29(HSSφ2(t))2+2dFφ2dt=64HSSφ29(HSSφ2)2+22dHSSφ2dt, 54

so that our main result is manifestly confirmed also in this case.

In Fig. 7, we numerically illustrate the same qualitative time behavior of the HSS and QFI for two different initial states: (a) a four-qubit system (n=4) and (b) a six-qubit system (n=6) (with m=1), initially prepared in the following W-like states

|W4=14(|1000+eiφ|0100+|0010+|0001), 55

and

|W6=16(eiφ|100000+eiϕ|010000+|001000+|000100+|000010+|000001), 56

respectively.

Figure 7.

Figure 7

Dynamics of quantum Fisher information F(t) (red solid line) and Hilbert–Schmidt speed HSS(t) (amplified by 1.3 times for comparison, blue dashed line) which are computed with the same phase parameter as a function of time t for the (a) four-qubit system prepared in initial state (55) and (b) six-qubit system prepared in initial state (56) described in Fig. 6 when one of the qubits is affected by the noise.

As another example, we choose n and m arbitrary with the n-qubit register prepared in a Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ)-like state50,51 written as

|GHZn=12(eiφ|0n+|1n), 57

where the relevant phase parameter appears. Calculating the evolved state of the system, we find that the corresponding QFI and HSS are given, respectively, by

Fn,mGHZ(φ)=Fφ=(2α21+α2)m,HSSn,mGHZ(φ)=HSSφ=αm2. 58

Hence, we can write

Fφ=2m+2(HSSφ)241/m(HSSφ)2/m+1-mdFφdt=2m+3(HSSφ)41/m(HSSφ)2/m+1-m-1dHSSφdt, 59

explicitly leading to our main result also in this general case of n qubits, as already confirmed by the other previous examples with a fixed number of qubits.

Coupling to a common environment: depolarizing channel

Now we investigate the phase estimation problem for a natural parametrization of arbitrary pure states affected by the (isotropic) depolarizing channel49 given by the map

|ψ0ρdep=η|ψ0ψ0|+1-ηdId×d, 60

in which η and d denote the reliability of the channel and dimension of the Hilbert space, respectively. This form of collective channel, mixing the initial n-qubit pure state with white noise and illustrated in Fig. 8, plays an important role in various quantum information tasks, such as quantum cloning machines52, NMR quantum computing53, entanglement optimization54, quantum error correction55, and quantum repeaters56. We focus on the following parametrization of input pure states

|ψ0=1djeiφj|j. 61

After lengthy calculation one can find that the general expression of QFI associated with any parameter φj is given by57

Fφj=4(d-1)η22d+d(d-2)η. 62

Moreover, we obtain that the HSS corresponding to the parameter φj can be represented as

HSSφj=d-1dη, 63

leading to the following relationship between QFI and HSS:

Fφj=4dd-1HSSφj2(d2-2d)HSSφj+2d-1dFφjdt=44d-1+dd-2HSSφjdd-1HSSφj2d-1+dd-2HSSφj2dHSSφjdt. 64

Because d=2n2, our main result can be immediately confirmed. Combining this result with the fact that dHSSφjdt=(d-1/d)dηdt (see Eq. (63)), we see that when the reliability parameter of the depolarizing channel oscillates with time, an indication of non-Markovianity58, the oscillations are in turn detected easily by the HSS.

Figure 8.

Figure 8

Illustration of an n-qubit register collectively subject to white noise under the action of a common depolarizing channel. This channel turns an initial pure state |ψ0 into the mixture ρdep=η|ψ0ψ0|+1-ηdId×d. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

Coupling to a common environment: dephasing channel

Here, the validity of our main result is checked for the dynamics of an n-qubit system with total angular momentum j=n/2 in the presence of collisional dephasing, as depicted in Fig. 9. Using a unitary evolution, we can prepare the probes in the following GHZ-like initial state

|GHZ~n=12(|0n+einφ|1n)12(|n/2,n/2+einφ|n/2,-n/2), 65

where {|j,m} for m=-j,...,j denotes the collective basis constructed from the eigenvectors of Jz, representing the z component of the total angular momentum for all qubits, i.e., Jz|j,m=m|j,m. The effect of the collisional dephasing channel on input state (65), can be modeled as the interaction between the qubits and the common thermal reservoir59,60. In the interaction picture, the master equation of the system can be expressed as61

ρ˙(t)=γ2[2Jzρ(t)Jz-ρ(t)Jz2-Jz2ρ(t)], 66

where γ represents the dephasing rate which may be time-dependent, and ρ denotes the reduced density operator of the system. In the case of single-qubit systems, Eq. (66) reduces to

ρ˙(t)=γ2[σzρ(t)σz-ρ(t)], 67

corresponding to a single-qubit dephasing channel. Because the QFI and the HSS remain invariant under the unitary evolution being independent of the phase parameter, working in the interaction picture does not affect the result of the calculation. Solving Eq. (82), one can find that the time evolution of the density matrix elements is expressed as

ρm,m(t)j,m|ρ(t)|j,m=ρm,m(0)e-(m-m)2τ, 68

where τ=γt.

Figure 9.

Figure 9

Illustration of an n-qubit register subject to the action of a common dephasing channel. This channel turns an initial pure GHZ state |GHZ~n=12(|0n+einφ|1n) into a mixed state ρ. This figure was created using Keynote, version 10.3.9 (7029.9.8), URL: https://apps.apple.com/it/app/keynote/id409183694?mt=12.

We are interested to compare the dynamics of the QFI and HSS when computed with respect to initial phase φ~=nφ imprinted on the input state (65). The corresponding QFI is given by60

Fφ~=ne-2n2τ. 69

In addition, we find that the HSS has the following simple exponential form:

HSSφ~=e-22n-12τ2, 70

resulting in the relation

Fφ~=nen2ln2HSSφ~2n-12dFφ~dt=n3HSSφ~2n-12en2ln2HSSφ~2n-12dHSSφ~dt, 71

by which our main result can be verified straightforwardly.

Discussion

Quantum information processing based on n-qubit registers provides a paradigmatic playground for fundamental research on composite quantum systems with potential technological advances50,6265. For this reason, finding useful tools for the convenient characterization of quantum features within quantum registers is particularly desired.

In this paper, we have constructed a strong relationship for n-qubit systems between the Hilbert–Schmidt speed (HSS), which is a special case of quantum statistical speed, and the quantum Fisher information (QFI), a key concept in parameter estimation theory and in quantum metrology in general. The idea underlying this relationship stems from the fact that the QFI, quantifying the sensitivity of an initial state with respect to changes of the parameter of a dynamical evolution, is itself a quantum statistical speed extracted from the Bures distance. In fact, our detailed analysis, carried out for several paradigmatic open quantum systems ranging from one qubit to n qubits under different environmental conditions, shows that these two quantities exhibit the same qualitative dynamical behaviors. Therefore, in contrast to the typical computational complication of the QFI, especially for multipartite systems, our findings provide evidence that the HSS can be instead adopted as an efficient tool in the process of quantum phase estimation implemented by n-qubit systems, because of its straightforward determination.

We point out that the present results are an advance of previously reported analysis66, where the HSS has been shown to be useful for metrological resolution of phase shift induced by a unitary transformation without noisy dynamics. Here, instead, we provide evidence that the HSS is a powerful figure of merit for the enhanced estimation of a phase encoded in the initial state of an open system made of n qubits subject to noisy channels. As an interesting outlook, these results suggest to extend the analysis to problems in noisy quantum phase estimation, which encompass cases when both parameter encoding and noisy dynamics happen simultaneously (as occurs, for instance, in frequency estimation processes under pure dephasing67).

On the one hand, it is known that the QFI monotonically decreases under Markovian dynamics, since it cannot increase under completely positive maps6870, so that it can be used as a witness of non-Markovianity. Originally, introducing a flow of QFI as Iφ(t)=dFφ(t)/dt, it has been suggested71 that if Iφ(t)>0 for some t, then the time evolution is non-Markovian. Nevertheless, the efficiency of the QFI flow to detect the non-Markovianity in various scenarios has not been yet analytically compared with the other faithful witnesses of non-Markovianity (see Ref.72 for a numerical study on the interplay between the dynamics of the QFI and the trace distance an important indicator of non-Markovianity). On the other hand, the HSS flow dHSSφ(t)/dt has been recently proposed as a faithful witness of non-Markovianity in low dimensional systems73,74. As a useful consequence, our results also provide a sanity check of the QFI flow as a witness of non-Markovianity. Moreover, because the QFI is always contractive under Markovian dynamics, our results supply strong evidence for contractivity of the HSS under memoryless evolution of high-dimensional systems and pave the way to further studies on its applications in measuring the non-Markovianity in open quantum systems made of qudits.

Finally, it should be noted that much attention has been recently devoted to exploring the use of continuous variable (CV) systems in quantum information processing7577. It originates from the fact that the continuous-spectrum quantum variables can be easier to manipulate than quantum bits for performing various quantum information processes. Therefore, generalizing our results to the applicability of HSS in the CV context remains of interest and will be addressed elsewhere.

Acknowledgements

H.R.J. thanks Manuel Gessner for invaluable comments as well as constructive remarks. H.R.J. also wishes to acknowledge the financial support of the MSRT of Iran and Jahrom University.

Author contributions

H.R.J. conceived the idea and performed the calculations. R.L.F. supervised the work. Both authors discussed the results and contributed to the preparation of the manuscript.

Competing interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

Footnotes

Publisher's note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

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