This work formulates dynamical-decoupling (DD) spectroscopy as a reduced observation problem. Rather than treating measured coherence responses as direct probes of the full environmental noise spectrum, the paper introduces a protocol-dependent map from parametrized spectral families to a small set of observables and analyzes its local Jacobian structure. The main result is a geometric framework in which spectral directions are classified into observable, weakly observable, and compressed sectors according to the singular-value structure and effective rank of the reduced map. Within this framework, plateau behavior and fixed protocol ratios arise when the reduced image becomes effectively low-dimensional, while abrupt transitions are interpreted as switching between response sectors with different local observability structure. A running power-law example is used to illustrate how amplitude and slope deformations are transmitted differently into protocol observables, and how protocol ratios can become locally insensitive without implying full spectral universality. The analysis emphasizes that DD protocols access environmental structure only through compressed, protocol-shaped images of the underlying spectrum. This provides a unifying interpretation of several familiar DD phenomena, including plateau regions, fixed-ratio structures, and sharp protocol-level transitions, in terms of reduced observation geometry rather than direct spectral reconstruction. v2 :This work formulates dynamical-decoupling spectroscopy as a reduced observation map from parameterized noise spectra to protocol-level observables. Using the Jacobian of this map, we classify spectral directions into observable, weakly observable, and compressed sectors via an effective-rank criterion. Plateau behavior and fixed protocol ratios are shown to arise from geometric compression of the reduced image, combined with a proportional-locking condition, rather than from full spectral universality. Abrupt transitions are interpreted as switching between response sectors with different local observability structures. The framework provides a unified geometric interpretation of sensitivity, compression, and invariance in DD-based noise spectroscopy.
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Hiroyuki Shioiri
University of Jaffna
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Hiroyuki Shioiri (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1fc42cdee9eb8c0dce5c9d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20496404