Abstract
We study the role of the electromagnetic field’s frequency on the precision limits of time measurements from a quantum perspective, using single photons as a paradigmatic system. We demonstrate that a quantum enhancement of precision is possible only when combining both intensity and spectral resources and, in particular, that spectral correlations enable a quadratic scaling of precision with the number of probes. We identify the general mathematical structure of nonphysical states that achieve the Heisenberg limit and show how a finite spectral variance may cause a quantum-to-classical-like transition in precision scaling for pure states similar to the one observed for noisy systems. Finally, we provide a clear and consistent geometrical time-frequency phase space interpretation of our results, identifying what should be considered as spectral classical resources.
- Received 12 October 2022
- Revised 2 May 2023
- Accepted 30 May 2023
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.030801
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