2 research outputs found
Spatiotemporal Multiplexed Rydberg Receiver
Rydberg states of alkali atoms, where the outer valence electron is excited
to high principal quantum numbers, have large electric dipole moments allowing
them to be used as sensitive, wideband, electric field sensors. These sensors
use electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) to measure incident electric
fields. The characteristic timescale necessary to establish EIT determines the
effective speed at which the atoms respond to time-varying RF radiation.
Previous studies have predicted that this EIT relaxation rate causes a
performance roll-off in EIT-based sensors beginning at a less than 10 MHz RF
data symbol rate. Here, we propose an architecture for increasing the response
speed of Rydberg sensors to greater than 100 MHz, through spatio-temporal
multiplexing (STM) of the probe laser. We present experimental results
validating the architecture's temporal multiplexing component using a pulsed
laser. We benchmark a numerical model of the sensor to this experimental data
and use the model to predict the STM sensor's performance as an RF
communications receiver. For an on-off keyed (OOK) waveform, we use the
numerical model to predict bit-error-ratios (BERs) as a function of RF power
and data rates demonstrating feasibility of error free communications up to 100
Mbps with an STM Rydberg sensor.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure