Physicists Find a New Way Around Quantum Limits

By reworking the very nature of quantum uncertainty, researchers have discovered a way to measure the unmeasurable with unprecedented precision. Their method, adapted from quantum computing, hints at a future of sensors so sensitive they could transform navigation, medicine, and astronomy. Credit: Shutterstock

Foundational research is paving the way for next-generation quantum sensors.

Physicists in Australia and the United Kingdom have found a way to reshape quantum uncertainty, offering a new method that bypasses the limits set by the well-known Heisenberg uncertainty principle. Their discovery could lay the groundwork for next-generation sensors with extraordinary precision, with potential uses in navigation, medical imaging, and astronomy.

The Heisenberg uncertainty principle, first introduced in 1927, states that it is impossible to know certain pairs of properties, such as a particle’s position and momentum, with unlimited accuracy at the same time. In practice, this means that increasing precision in one property inevitably reduces certainty in the other.

In a study published in Science Advances, researchers led by Dr. Tingrei Tan of the University of Sydney Nano Institute and School of Physics demonstrated how to design an alternative trade-off, one that allows position and momentum to be measured simultaneously with exceptional accuracy.

“Think of uncertainty like air in a balloon,” said Dr. Tan, a Sydney Horizon Fellow in the Faculty of Science. “You can’t remove it without popping the balloon, but you can squeeze it around to shift it. That’s effectively what we’ve done. We push the unavoidable quantum uncertainty to places we don’t care about (big, coarse jumps in position and momentum) so the fine details we do care about can be measured more precisely.”

Clock Analogy Image To Explain Experimental Approach
By sacrificing our knowledge about the ‘coarse information’ our quantum experiment can focus on the finer information, circumventing, but not breaching, Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. The researchers use the analogy of a clock. Think of a normal clock with two hands: the hour hand and the minute hand. Now imagine the clock only has one hand. If it’s the hour hand, you can tell what hour it is and roughly what minute, but the minute reading will be very imprecise. If the clock only has the minute hand, you can read the minutes very precisely, but you lose track of the larger context – specifically, which hour you’re in. This ‘modular’ measurement sacrifices some global information in exchange for much finer detail. Credit: The University of Sydney

The researchers also use the analogy of a clock to explain their findings (see image). Think of a normal clock with two hands: the hour hand and the minute hand. Now imagine the clock only has one hand. If it’s the hour hand, you can tell what hour it is and roughly what minute, but the minute reading will be very imprecise. If the clock only has the minute hand, you can read the minutes very precisely, but you lose track of the larger context – specifically, which hour you’re in. This ‘modular’ measurement sacrifices some global information in exchange for much finer detail.

“By applying this strategy in quantum systems, we can measure the changes in both position and momentum of a particle far more precisely,” said first author Dr. Christophe Valahu from the Quantum Control Laboratory team at the University of Sydney. “We give up global information but gain the ability to detect tiny changes with unprecedented sensitivity.”

Tingrei Tan
Dr. Tingrei Tan in the Sydney Nanoscience Hub at the University of Sydney Nano Institute. Dr. Tan is a Sydney Horizon Fellow in the Faculty of Science and is the manager of the Quantum Control Laboratory at Sydney Nano. Credit: Fiona Wolf/University of Sydney

Quantum computing tools for a new sensing protocol

This strategy was outlined theoretically in 2017. Here, Dr. Tan’s team performed the first experimental demonstration by using a technological approach they had previously developed for error-corrected quantum computers, a result recently published in Nature Physics.

“It’s a neat crossover from quantum computing to sensing,” said co-author Professor Nicolas Menicucci, a theorist from RMIT University. “Ideas first designed for robust quantum computers can be repurposed so that sensors pick up weaker signals without being drowned out by quantum noise.

The Sydney team implemented the sensing protocol using the tiny vibrational motion of a trapped ion – the quantum equivalent of a pendulum. They prepared the ion in “grid states”, a kind of quantum state originally developed for error-corrected quantum computing. With this, they showed that both position and momentum can be measured together with precision beyond the ‘standard quantum limit’ – the best achievable using only classical sensors.

Christophe Valahu
Dr. Christophe Valahu in the Quantum Control Laboratory at the University of Sydney Nano Institute. Dr. Valahu is standing in front of the ion trap used in the experiment. Credit: Fiona Wolf/The University of Sydney

“We haven’t broken Heisenberg’s principle. Our protocol works entirely within quantum mechanics,” said Dr. Ben Baragiola, co-author from RMIT. “The scheme is optimized for small signals, where fine details matter more than coarse ones.

Why it matters

The ability to detect extremely small changes is important across science and technology. Ultra-precise quantum sensors could sharpen navigation in environments where GPS doesn’t work (such as submarines, underground, or spaceflight); enhance biological and medical imaging; monitor materials and gravitational systems; or probe fundamental physics.

While still at the laboratory stage, the experiment demonstrates a new framework for future sensing technologies targeted towards measuring tiny signals. Rather than replacing existing approaches, it adds a complementary tool to the quantum-sensing toolbox.

“Just as atomic clocks transformed navigation and telecommunications, quantum-enhanced sensors with extreme sensitivity could enable whole new industries,” said Dr. Valahu.

A collaborative effort

This project united experimentalists at the University of Sydney with theorists at RMIT, the University of Melbourne, Macquarie University, and the University of Bristol in Britain. It shows how collaboration across institutions and borders can accelerate progress and strengthen Australia’s quantum research community.

“This work highlights the power of collaboration and the international connections that drive discovery,” Dr. Tan said.

Reference: “Quantum-enhanced multi-parameter sensing in a single mode” 24 September 2025, Science Advances.
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adw9757

Funding: Australian Research Council, Office of Naval Research Global, US Army Research Office for Physical Sciences, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Lockheed Martin, European Commission, Sydney Quantum Academy, H. and A. Harley

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