Weak Measurements of a Superconducting Qubit Reconcile Incompatible Observables

ORAL

Abstract

Traditional uncertainty relations dictate a minimal amount of noise in incompatible projective quantum measurements. However, not all measurements are projective. Weak measurements are minimally invasive methods for obtaining partial state information without projection. Recently, weak measurements were shown to obey an uncertainty relation cast in terms of entropies. We experimentally test this entropic uncertainty relation with strong and weak measurements of a superconducting transmon qubit. A weak measurement, we find, can reconcile two strong measurements’ incompatibility, via backaction on the state. Mathematically, a weak value---a preselected and postselected expectation value---lowers the uncertainty bound. Hence we provide experimental support for the physical interpretation of the weak value as a determinant of a weak measurement’s ability to reconcile incompatible operations.

*This work was supported by NSF grants PHY-1607156, PHY-1752844, PHY-1125565, ITAMP, and PHY-1748958 and by GBMF grant GBMF-2644

Presenters

  • Jonathan Monroe

    • Washington University, St. Louis

Authors

  • Jonathan Monroe

    • Washington University, St. Louis
  • Taeho Lee

    • Washington University, St. Louis
  • Nicole Yunger Halpern

    • Harvard Smithsonian Institute
    • Harvard-Smithsonian ITAMP
    • Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Institute for Theoretical Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
  • Kater Murch

    • Department of Physics, Washington University in St. Louis
    • Physics, Washington University, St. Louis
    • Washington University in St. Louis
    • Washington University, St. Louis