Quantum noise is a type of noise in a quantum system due to quantum mechanical phenomena such as quantized fields and the uncertainty principle. This principle says that some observables cannot simultaneously be known with arbitrary precision. This indeterminate state of matter introduces a fluctuation in the value of properties of a quantum system, even at zero temperature. These fluctuations in the absence of thermal noise are known as zero-point energy fluctuations.
Quantum noise can also come from the discrete nature of the small quantum constituents such as electrons and quantum effects, such as photocurrents. An example of this form of quantum noise is shot noise as coined by J. Verdeyen which comes from the discrete arrival of photons or electrons in a detector. Because these quanta arrive randomly in time, even a perfectly steady current or light beam exhibits fluctuations in the detected signal.