
The work bridges the gap between theoretical precision limits and real‑world noisy environments, making Heisenberg‑level metrology viable for commercial quantum‑sensing applications.
Quantum metrology has long been constrained by the trade‑off between ultimate precision—set by the Heisenberg limit—and the fragility of entangled probes. Dicke‑superposition states, engineered as balanced superpositions of extreme eigenstates of the interaction Hamiltonian, push the quantum Fisher information toward N², effectively reaching the Heisenberg bound for large qubit ensembles. By extending the analysis to two‑body Hamiltonians, the authors also demonstrate super‑Heisenberg scaling in niche configurations, highlighting a versatile toolkit for phase‑sensitive measurements across diverse quantum platforms.
Beyond raw sensitivity, the study’s most compelling contribution is its systematic noise analysis. Dephasing, phase‑damping, amplitude‑damping, and global depolarising channels—all common in superconducting circuits, trapped ions, and photonic networks—were modeled, revealing that Dicke superpositions retain a larger fraction of their QFI than GHZ or W‑type states. This resilience stems from the collective symmetry of Dicke states, which distributes error impact more evenly across qubits, reducing the degradation of entanglement under realistic decoherence rates. Consequently, these probes offer a pragmatic path toward high‑precision sensing without the prohibitive error‑correction overhead traditionally required.
The practical implications are far‑reaching. In biomedical imaging, where magnetic field gradients must be measured with sub‑nanotesla accuracy, noise‑tolerant Dicke probes could enable portable, high‑resolution scanners. Materials science stands to benefit from ultra‑precise strain and temperature sensors that operate reliably in noisy laboratory environments. Moreover, the framework established here invites further exploration of tailored entangled states for specific Hamiltonians, potentially unlocking new regimes of quantum advantage in navigation, time‑keeping, and fundamental physics experiments. As quantum hardware matures, integrating Dicke‑superposition probes may become a cornerstone of next‑generation quantum sensor architectures.
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