Quantum Metrology IV
Receiving Wi-Fi Signal with Warm Rydberg Atoms
10:42 am – 10:54 amRydberg atoms exhibit both remarkable sensitivity to electromagnetic fields making them promising candidates for revolutionizing field sensors and, unlike conventional antennas, they neither disturb the measured field nor necessitate extensive calibration procedures. In this study, we propose a receiver design for data-modulated signal reception near the 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi frequency band, harnessing the capabilities of warm Rydberg atoms. In the experiment, we consider a 5-level energy ladder of 85Rb. In the following setup, the probe laser is tuned to the D2 transition between ground state 52S1/2 (𝐹 = 3) and 52P3/2 (𝐹 = 4). The second and third fields coupled to the 52P3/2 (𝐹 = 4) → 52D5/2 (𝐹 = 5) and 52D5/2 (𝐹 = 5) → 322F7/2 transitions respectively. The
last 322F7/2 → 322G9/2 transition is in the considered microwave regime. The fields excite atoms to the Rydberg state and cause the electromagnetically induced absorption effect to emerge, which can be interpreted as the interference of electromagnetically induced transparencies. To perform the heterodyne detection we introduce an additional microwave field acting as a local
oscillator. The main goal of the experiment is to receive data encoded into the signal through modulation of the microwave field, using the quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) scheme. In this scheme, the signal is generated from the amplitude-modulated I (in-phase) and Q (quadrature) components shifted in phase by 𝜋/2. The components define two-dimensional IQ space, in which QAM can be described as an even symmetrical points distribution around the origin. We consider various transmission frequencies for QAM4, QAM16 and QAM64 and its influence on chanel capacity using Voronoi diagrams. We also offer a characterization of our setup, encompassing the atomic response frequency range, attainable electric field amplitudes, and sensitivity.
Funding acknowledgement
This research was funded in whole or in part by National Science Centre, Poland grant No. 2021/41/N/ST2/03114The "Quantum Optical Technologies" (FENG.02.01-IP.05-0017/23) project is carried out within the Measure 2.1 International Research Agendas programme of the Foundation for Polish Science co-financed by the European Union under the European Funds for Smart Economy 2021-2027 (FENG).
- 10:30 am – 10:42 amSpectroscopy of Rubidium atoms in RF plasma
Bineet Kumar Dash (presenter), Xinyan Xiang, Eric G Paradis, Georg A Raithel
- 10:42 am – 10:54 amReceiving Wi-Fi Signal with Warm Rydberg Atoms
Marcin Jastrzębski (presenter), Jan Nowosielski, Pavel Halavach, Karol Łukanowski, Marcin Jarzyna, Mateusz Mazelanik, Wojciech Wasilewski, Michal Parniak
- 10:54 am – 11:06 amRydberg EIT in a Doppler-free star configuration
Jeremy Glick (presenter), Brielle E Anderson, Timothy N Nunley, Josiah Bingaman, David H Meyer, Paul Kunz
- 11:06 am – 11:18 amThree-dimensional k-vector measurements with an electrically small Rydberg rf polarimeter
Peter K Elgee (presenter), Kevin C Cox, Joshua C Hill, Paul Kunz, Kermit James E LeBlanc, David H. Meyer
- 11:18 am – 11:30 amRydberg EIT in Rb using frequency modulation
Duncan Alasdair Tate (presenter), Kate Jensen, Eli Zibello
- 11:30 am – 11:42 amPolariton noise in Rydberg electrometry
Teng Zhang (presenter), Luis Felipe Goncalves, Georg A Raithel, David A Anderson
- 11:42 am – 11:54 amAll-Optical Transient Phase Detection in a 3-Photon Rydberg-Atom Electrometer
Stephanie M Bohaichuk (presenter), Vijin Venu, Florian Christaller, Matthias Schmidt, Harald Kübler, James P Shaffer
- 11:54 am – 12:06 pmAbstract Withdrawn
- 12:06 pm – 12:18 pmAbstract Withdrawn