Most major nations are running their own independent quantum missions with the aim of achieving self-reliance in quantum technology. The greatest attention in the field of quantum technologies has been focused on quantum computing and quantum communication. The promises these technologies hold are immense, ranging from breakthroughs in drug discovery to ultra-secure communication.
However, such technologies are not possible without accurate and precise measurements. Hence, the role of Quantum Sensing and Metrology (QSM) is paramount to the success of any quantum mission. Just as our sensory organs enable us to survive and interact with the environment, quantum sensors allow other quantum technologies to function effectively and thrive.
Quantum sensors are devices that exploit quantum properties such as entanglement, interference, state squeezing, spin, and indistinguishability to detect physical changes in quantities like electric and magnetic fields, gravity, and temperature. These sensors can be fabricated on platforms such as photonics, atomic and molecular systems, superconducting circuits, or solid-state devices.
Quantum metrology, on the other hand, is the science of measurement that uses the principles of quantum mechanics to achieve precision and accuracy beyond classical limits. Together, quantum sensing and metrology provide extremely precise measurements of physical quantities, levels of precision that conventional sensing systems cannot attain.
Various types of quantum sensors exist, classified based on the phenomena they exploit, the systems they use, and the properties they measure, as summarized in Table 1.
Table 1. Classification of quantum sensors according to their operating principles and representative examples.
|
Technology Type |
Implementation |
System Description |
|
Measured Properties |
Example Devices / Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Solid-State Spins |
NV centers in diamonds |
Single-electron spins localized in atomic defects in diamond lattice |
|
Magnetic field, electric field, temperature, pressure, rotation |
NV-diamond magnetometers (biomagnetism, material imaging) |
|
Silicon vacancy centers |
Point defects in SiC or GaN crystals with quantum sensitivity |
|
Same as NVs, with enhanced robustness |
Chip-scale magnetic & thermal sensors |
|
|
Defects in 2D Materials |
hBN, TMDs etc. |
Quantum-emissive or spin-active defect states created in 2D material lattices such as hBN, graphene, or transition-metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) |
|
Electric field, magnetic field, strain, temperature, pressure, photon emission properties |
Quantum emitters for integrated photonics, nanoscale strain sensors, quantum plasmonic devices, single-photon sources for quantum communication, on-chip magnetometry |
|
Neutral Atoms |
Atomic vapor cells |
Alkali atoms (Rb, Cs) in vapor sense environmental changes |
|
Magnetic field, electric field, rotation, temperature |
SERF magnetometers, quantum compasses |
|
Cold atom interferometers |
Laser-cooled atoms used in matter-wave interferometry |
|
Gravity, acceleration, rotation, gradient mapping |
Gravimeters, gyroscopes, navigation systems (Exail, Muquans) |
|
|
Trapped Ions |
Paul/linear traps |
Single ions suspended in vacuum with precise laser control |
|
Magnetic field, electric field |
Fundamental research tools, early-stage space field mapping |
|
Superconducting Circuits |
SQUIDs (Superconducting Quantum Interference Devices) |
Phase difference in superconducting loops detects magnetic/electric changes |
|
Magnetic field, electric field |
Cryogenic magnetic scanners, brain imaging (MEG) |
|
Photonic Sensors |
Entangled photons, squeezed states |
Exploit quantum correlations in light for enhanced signal-to-noise ratio |
|
Displacement, pressure, phase, imaging resolution |
Sub-shot-noise interferometry, quantum LiDAR, biomedical imaging |
|
Quantum Dot Sensors |
Quantum-confined nanoparticles |
Charge and spin states in semiconductor nanostructures |
|
Electric field, fluorescence lifetime, biosensing |
Medical diagnostics, photonic neural interfaces |
|
Topological Sensors |
Majorana-based systems |
Topologically protected states resist decoherence, ideal for stable quantum sensing |
|
Still in R&D: potentially magnetic, charge, thermal gradients |
High-fidelity probes for exotic states in condensed matter |
|
Optomechanical Sensors |
Cavity optomechanics |
Quantum light interacts with nano/micro mechanical resonators |
|
Force, acceleration, displacement, vibration |
Inertial sensing, gravitational wave detection (LIGO-like systems) |
Each leading quantum nation has developed its own area of specialization. For instance, India emphasizes NV-center-based sensors, magnetometers, atomic clocks, and quantum imaging [1]; the United States focuses on atomic clocks, magnetometers, and quantum LiDAR [2]; Europe prioritizes gravimetry, optical clocks, and quantum navigation [3]; the United Kingdom concentrates on quantum positioning, gravimeters, and magnetometry [4]; China invests heavily in quantum radar, atomic clocks, and submarine detection [5]; while Australia is advancing in quantum navigation and mining-related sensing technologies [6].
Exiting quantum sensing and metrology technology
Quantum sensing and metrology is the most successful vertical and has started being deployed in some sectors. For instance,
Absolute quantum gravimeter is deployed in the Hawaiian Islands, USA, at Kīlauea volcano [7] and MuQuans has deployed quantum gravimeter at Mount Etna in Italy [8]. The quantum gravimeter is being used to monitor volcanic activity by measuring minute changes in the local gravitational field, which are caused by subsurface magma movements.
NASA has deployed quantum sensor at International Space Station [9]. This could lead to the development of enhanced space navigation systems, highly precise sensors for Earth and planetary observation, and help scientists search for new physics beyond current models of gravity and quantum mechanics.
Scanning NV microscopy is already being used for the device failure analysis and research purpose [10]. Recently, Q-CTRL has demonstrated the use of quantum sensor for GPS free navigation [11]. Australian researchers are exploring the possibilities of dope testing for athletes with quantum sensors[11].
Applications of quantum sensing and metrology
Healthcare & Biomedical: Quantum magnetometers can be applied for magnetoencephalography (MEG) for Brain activity mapping and Magnetocardiography (MCG) for Non-invasive detection of heart magnetic fields. Quantum sensors will be able to help diagnose neurological conditions such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s more accurately and easily. Quantum sensors based on NV-center diamonds can be used as thermometry to monitoring sub-cellular temperature fluctuations. Besides, quantum sensors can identify cancerous tissue by detecting magnetic or electric anomalies.
Geophysics, Earth & Environmental Monitoring: Quantum gravimeters could be used for variety of applications including groundwater detection, volcano monitoring, earthquake prediction, glacial mass measurement. Quantum magnetometers can help in in mineral & oil exploration, quantum-enhanced spectroscopy for pollution and greenhouse gases.
Navigation, Aerospace & Timekeeping: Quantum sensors-based accelerometer and gyroscope can provide GPS free navigation, and planetary gravimetry. Optical atomic clocks can be used for global positioning accuracy. Quantum-enhanced radar and LiDAR can be utilized for space object tracking.
Industrial & Infrastructure Monitoring: Quantum sensors can be utilized for aircraft fuselage inspecting, pipeline monitoring, railway fault detection using gravity or magnetic mapping. It could help- in bridge safety by monitoring strain, tilt, or vibrations; power grid monitoring by quantum-enhanced voltage/current sensors; battery diagnostics by measuring degradation or leakage non-invasively.
Scientific Research & Fundamental Physics: QSM will be useful for fundamental constant testing, gravitational redshift validation, equivalence principle testing, dark matter detection, gravitational wave detection, detection of exotic particles, redefinition of SI units using quantum clocks and interferometers.
QSM is also helping other verticals of the Quantum mission to grow as discussed below.
Quantum sensing and metrology in Quantum Materials and Devices
Quantum sensing and metrology not only benefits from advances in quantum materials, but also actively drives their discovery and optimization. Quantum sensors help in characterizing quantum materials for instance, quantum sensors like NV-center magnetometers and SQUIDs can map magnetic domains at nanoscale in superconductors or antiferromagnets, detect tiny currents in 2D devices, measure strain, temperature, or electric fields in materials at very high resolution. Already developed NV-based scanning probe magnetometry is being used to image vortices in superconductors and edge currents in graphene.
Quantum metrology helps in calibrating material parameters. It enables precise standards for conductivity, resistance, and frequency, which are necessary to test and validate new quantum devices.
QSM helps in improving device fabrication, for instance, quantum devices require ultra-clean, defect-controlled materials. QSM tools allow- defect detection in diamond (for NV centers), spin coherence mapping to test suitability for qubit devices and precise thickness and strain measurement in thin films and heterostructures.
Moreover, before quantum materials and devices can scale to industry, they must pass reliability and reproducibility tests. Quantum metrology provides the non-destructive, highly sensitive testing that can be applied inline during manufacturing.
Quantum sensing and metrology in Quantum Computing
QSM plays a silent but critical role in making quantum computing possible. Think of QSM as the “test & calibration backbone” for building, scaling, and stabilizing quantum computers.
Qubits (superconducting, trapped ions, NV centers, spins in semiconductors, photons) are extremely fragile and error-prone. Quantum sensors (NV magnetometers, SQUIDs, atomic clocks) can detect minute variations in fields, noise, and material defects that affect qubits. It can provide nanoscale readout of coherence times (T1, T2) and error sources and helps optimize qubit placement, fabrication, and control pulses.
Additionally, quantum gates require picosecond timing precision. Quantum clocks and metrology frameworks can provide stable frequency references for gate pulses, synchronize multi-qubit processors and distributed quantum computers, and enable interconnects between different quantum systems (hybrid qubit platforms).
Besides, quantum error correction (QEC) is limited by how well we can identify and characterize error sources. QSM can help here by measuring magnetic/electric noise spectra around qubits, enabling real-time noise diagnostics to feed into QEC algorithms, offering benchmarks for comparing qubits (metrology for error rates).
To move from lab to quantum advantage, devices must meet industry-level standards. Quantum metrology establishes uniform benchmarks: Gate fidelity, Qubit coherence time, Crosstalk, Readout accuracy. These metrics allow global comparability and guide investment/industrial scaling.
QSM is the “enabler of trust” in quantum computing: It helps scientists see the invisible errors, engineers fix the sources of decoherence, and industries certify and scale quantum processors. Without QSM, building fault-tolerant and scalable quantum computers would be nearly impossible.
Quantum sensing and metrology in Quantum Communication
Quantum communication depends on extremely precise control of photons, entanglement, and timing. QSM plays a critical role by providing the tools to measure, calibrate, and stabilize these systems at levels far beyond classical methods. Let’s dive into how QSM is directly helping Quantum Communication, especially in QKD, quantum repeaters, satellite links, and secure networks.
Quantum key distribution faces several challenges namely; losses in optical fibers, detector noise (dark counts), and the need for precise timing alignment between transmitting and receiving nodes. QSM addresses these challenges through the development of single-photon detectors with ultra-low noise, which minimize false counts, and quantum clocks that enable precise timing synchronization across quantum networks.
Quantum repeaters are essential for extending the range of quantum communication networks but face difficulties such as loss of entanglement fidelity over long distances and memory decoherence in quantum storage devices. QSM plays a very important role by providing precise characterization of quantum memories, enabling the identification and mitigation of decoherence mechanisms.
In free-space optical communication, signal degradation due to atmospheric scattering and day-night stability variations are major obstacles. QSM mitigates these issues by using quantum-enhanced imaging and metrology to detect and analyze scattering patterns, thereby improving signal clarity.
Without QSM, it would be nearly impossible to detect single photons reliably, maintain timing precision at the femtosecond level across large distances, ensure low-error entanglement distribution over fiber or satellite. With QSM, we can push QKD from lab demos to real networks (India, China, Europe are already deploying), enable satellite QCom (like China’s Micius satellite, or ISRO’s upcoming quantum comm. demos), lay the foundation for a global quantum internet. In short, Quantum Communication gives us secure links, but Quantum Sensing & Metrology is what keeps those links alive, stable, and trustworthy.
The Road Ahead
The journey is far from over, as the challenges remain in miniaturization, robustness, and cost-effective scaling. However, the rapid pace of innovation indicates a future where quantum sensors are as ubiquitous and indispensable as microprocessors are today. The Eyes and Ears of the Quantum Age are not just watching, they are actively shaping a future where the impossible becomes possible.
In the grand orchestra of quantum science, quantum sensing and metrology is the conductor. National quantum missions around the globe are not just funding research, they are creating a clear pathway for these sensors to go from scientific curiosity to commercial and strategic assets. Quantum sensing and metrology is crucial for enabling quantum computing, securing the future, and creating unprecedented scientific discoveries by providing tools to measure with unparalleled precision. The journey is challenging, but the race is on. We are not just building technologies, we are fundamentally changing how we observe the world. The eyes and ears of the quantum age are here, and they are listening with a quantum ear to the universe.
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