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Fundamental limits on low-temperature quantum thermometry with finite resolution

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abstract

While the ability to measure low temperatures accurately in quantum systems is important in a wide range of experiments, the possibilities and the fundamental limits of quantum thermometry are not yet fully understood theoretically. Here we develop a general approach to low-temperature quantum thermometry, taking into account restrictions arising not only from the sample but also from the measurement process. We derive a fundamental bound on the minimal uncertainty for any temperature measurement that has a finite resolution. A similar bound can be obtained from the third law of thermodynamics. Moreover, we identify a mechanism enabling sub-exponential scaling, even in the regime of finite resolution. We illustrate this effect in the case of thermometry on a fermionic tight-binding chain with access to only two lattice sites, where we find a quadratic divergence of the uncertainty. We also give illustrative examples of ideal quantum gases and a square-lattice Ising model, highlighting the role of phase transitions.

fields

quant-ph 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

Non-equilibrium quantum thermometry with bosonic samples

quant-ph · 2026-06-26 · unverdicted · novelty 7.0

Non-Markovian strong coupling in a bosonic probe produces non-monotonic quantum Fisher information with a finite optimal interrogation time for thermometry, while squeezed states give transient gains and strong coupling softens low-T error scaling from exponential to polynomial.

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  • Non-equilibrium quantum thermometry with bosonic samples quant-ph · 2026-06-26 · unverdicted · none · ref 8 · internal anchor

    Non-Markovian strong coupling in a bosonic probe produces non-monotonic quantum Fisher information with a finite optimal interrogation time for thermometry, while squeezed states give transient gains and strong coupling softens low-T error scaling from exponential to polynomial.