3.1. Two-Point Resolution
Giacomo Sorelli et al. [
15] discussed a two-dimensional imaging problem—the resolution of two point sources. The scenario involves two point-like emitters in the object plane, each in a Gaussian state. After passing through an imaging system described by a Gaussian point spread function, the light reaches the image plane, where the task is to estimate the separation distance between the two points using the imaging apparatus. Let the amplitude point spread function from object plane coordinates
to image plane coordinates
be
The object plane contains two point-like squeezed light sources located at
and
, respectively. The objective is to estimate their separation distance
s. Since only the two points on the
x-axis are considered, the problem can be decoupled as
, where
is the normalized amplitude point spread function. With reference to the method of Giacomo Sorelli et al. [
15], we calculated the QFI for the separation distance
s between two point sources
and
(Note: A point source is described by a Dirac
function, which is not square-integrable. Its handling is detailed in
Appendix D). The calculation was performed for two thermal states, each with a mean photon number
.
coherent states
squeezed vacuum states
squeezed coherent states
, where
,
For the numerical calculations, we set the parameters as follows: The amplitude point spread function is given by
with
and the transmission coefficient
. Correspondingly, the basis function width is set to
. The basis functions at the object plane cover a range of width
, and those at the image plane cover a range of width
. After performing the singular value decomposition, the largest singular value is
. The smallest singular value retained is the 20th one, with
. In the computation process, the partial derivatives in Equation (
17) are approximated using the central difference formula,
, with a step size of
.
Under this parameter configuration, the QFI for the two-point separation
is calculated and plotted as a connected curve, with the results shown in the upper panel of
Figure 3. For each calculated data point, the QFI per effective photon
, obtained using the method from reference [
15] (denoted as
) and that from our proposed method (denoted as
) are compared. The relative deviation
is illustrated in the lower panel of
Figure 3.
Under this parameter configuration, the discrepancy between the two methods is
, thereby validating the correctness of our approach using existing results. For the two-point resolution problem, the estimation precision for a coherent state exhibits different curves depending on the relative phase between the two light sources. For estimating small separations
, the coherent state achieves optimal precision when the relative phase is
, and it reaches a higher precision limit compared to the case when
, demonstrating a super-resolution phenomenon. This result is close to the upper bound of QFI given by Cosmo Lupo et al. [
5]. For the squeezed vacuum state, it shows no advantage over the coherent state in the region of small
, which is of primary interest. Building upon the work in reference [
15], we consider coupling the optimal coherent state with a squeezed vacuum state to form a squeezed coherent state. By suppressing its displacement fluctuations, the precision can be further enhanced, surpassing the shot noise level.
3.2. Spatial Multi-Parameter Estimation of Optical Fields
To extend imaging from the two-point problem to broader quantum imaging applications, we now investigate the estimation of the unknown spatial distribution of an optical field. An optical field with a specific profile, after passing through an imaging system, forms a distorted spot on the image plane. Our task is to estimate the spatial distribution of the optical field at the object plane based on the field measured at the image plane.
Consider an optical field with an unknown spatial profile, represented by
. The function
is expanded using a set of basis functions
where the expansion coefficients
are our estimation targets. Together with the known basis functions
, they determine the characteristics of
. We consider three schemes for mode expansion using
and compare them. The first is the Hermite-Gaussian mode, commonly used in quantum optics and laser physics:
. The second is a typical basis function on a closed interval, the Legendre polynomials:
. The third is obtained from the singular value decomposition of the amplitude point spread function
, giving the right singular vectors:
.
We choose a representative and intuitive hypothetical field distribution for
:
, where
is a normalization constant. Its profile is shown in
Figure 4 (
a). We consider reconstructing
using the first 6 modes of the three aforementioned schemes. All three can achieve reconstruction with high accuracy; therefore, neglecting the influence of higher-order modes, we calculate the QFIM per average photon number
for the parameter vector
.
Our parameter settings are as follows: the basis function width is , , and correspondingly . For the amplitude point spread function, and the transmission coefficient is (chosen to avoid singular values greater than 1, which would cause model failure). After singular value decomposition, the largest singular value is . The smallest singular value retained is the 15th one, with . The step size for the central difference approximation is .
Under the three basis function schemes, the QFIM per average photon number
, yielded by the coherent state is shown in
Figure 4, respectively.
Furthermore, we calculated the diagonal elements of the QCRB
for the three basis function schemes and compared them with the results
obtained from the right singular vectors. This comparison reveals that the QCRB
provided by the right singular vector basis expansion is optimal for every parameter’s precision lower bound. This conclusion serves as a verification, using quantum estimation theory, of a classical optics finding [
22]. Additionally, after testing with various field profiles, we found that these computational results are independent of the specific values of the parameter vector
and are general in nature.
Next, we consider further enhancing the estimation precision for the expansion coefficients within the framework of the right singular vector basis. We note that a bright squeezed coherent state , where the displacement direction aligns with the squeezing direction, can effectively improve estimation accuracy. The average photon number of a squeezed coherent state is given by . Considering practical experimental constraints, the coherent-part mean photon number is relatively easy to prepare. However, the squeezed-part mean photon number is typically limited to a smaller mean photon number due to technical challenges. Here, we focus on the scenario where .
Unlike the classical case, when the bright squeezed coherent state
is used as the probe state,
the calculated QFIM becomes non-diagonal. This is because, as a non-classical optical field, the squeezed state exhibits quantum correlations between photons in different modes
. However, the diagonal elements of
are significantly reduced, and the matrix remains approximately diagonal. Its off-diagonal elements are of the same order of magnitude or one order smaller than the smallest diagonal element,
, yet are numerically significantly smaller than
. Thus, overall, the squeezed coherent state provides an improvement in precision.
Under the premise that , we fixed the squeezed-part mean photon number to a fixed value and incrementally increased the total photon number to calculate the QFIM. The observed trend in its values demonstrates an improvement characterized by a specific coefficient relative to the standard quantum limit. Keeping the total photon number fixed at while varying , we found that the degree of improvement offered by the squeezed coherent state is jointly influenced by the values of the parameter vector and the singular values . We investigated the enhancement effect provided by the squeezed-part mean photon number under two different optical field energy distributions.
From
Figure 5, it can be observed that the performance gain offered by the squeezed state over the coherent state is more pronounced for larger singular values
, and larger coefficients
. However, as the mean photon number in the squeezed-part
increases, the marginal improvement in estimation precision achieved by further squeezing gradually diminishes.
In general, for coherent imaging, one must account for not only the intensity distribution but also the phase distribution of the optical field, both of which are crucial. Therefore, we consider a more general complex-valued scenario represented by the parameter set . Using the same imaging system and parameters, with the right singular vectors as the basis set for calculation, we obtained the following result:
For the coherent state, the QCRB remains diagonal. This indicates that when using classical resources, there exists no statistical correlation among the parameters .
For the squeezed coherent state, as shown in
Figure 6,
is a block-diagonal matrix. Quantum entanglement induces statistical correlations among the estimates for different amplitude distribution parameters
and among the estimates for different phase parameters
. However, no statistical correlation exists between the amplitude part and the phase part. Therefore, estimating the amplitude distribution and the phase distribution independently is optimal. However, due to the presence of correlations within each part, performing separate measurements on individual modes cannot extract complete quantum information. Consequently, the optimal measurement scheme that approaches the QCRB requires a specific form of joint measurement.
Furthermore, we also examined the achievable estimation precision for the phase distribution of the optical field. Limited by the number-phase uncertainty relation, the estimation precision for the amplitude distribution and the phase distribution cannot be enhanced simultaneously. Employing a phase-squeezed state can likewise improve the estimation of the phase distribution. The degree of this improvement is influenced by the singular values and the energy distribution of the optical field, exhibiting a trend similar to that observed for amplitude estimation.
Overall, for estimating the spatial distribution of in the unknown optical field , we transform the problem into a multi-parameter estimation task via the basis function expansion method. Among various expansion schemes, we confirm that using the right singular vectors as the basis functions achieves the optimal estimation precision.
Compared to the coherent state, the squeezed coherent state can further enhance the estimation precision for either the amplitude or the phase of the basis function expansion coefficients. The degree of this improvement increases with larger singular values , larger expansion coefficients , and a higher mean photon number in the squeezed-part .
Due to the quantum correlations among different modes, when utilizing a squeezed coherent state as the resource, estimating the amplitude or phase distribution parameters requires a joint measurement scheme to approach the QCRB.