Experimental super-resolved phase measurements with shot-noise sensitivity (1311.2721v1)
Abstract: The ultimate sensitivity of optical measurements is a key element of many recent works. Classically, it is mainly limited by the shot noise limit. However, a measurement setup that incorporates quantum mechanical principles can surpass the shot noise limit and reach the Heisenberg limit. Nevertheless, many of those experiments fail to break even the classical shot-noise limit. Following a recent proposal, we present here the results of optical phase measurements with a photon-number resolving detector using coherent states of up to 4200 photons on average. An additional scheme that can be implemented using standard single-photon detectors is also presented, and the results of the two schemes are compared. These measurements present deterministic single-shot sub-wavelength super-resolution up to 288 better than the optical wavelength. The results follow the classically limited sensitivity, up to 86 times better than the wavelength.