A new quantum sensor can analyze the full spectrum of radio frequency and real-world signals, unleashing new potentials for soldier communications, spectrum awareness and electronic warfare.
Army researchers built the quantum sensor, which can sample the radio-frequency spectrum—from zero frequency up to 20 GHz—and detect AM and FM
radio, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi and other communication signals.
The Rydberg sensor uses laser
beams to create highly-excited Rydberg atoms directly above a microwave
circuit, to boost and hone in on the portion of the spectrum being measured.
The Rydberg atoms are sensitive to the circuit’s voltage, enabling the device
to be used as a sensitive probe for the wide range of signals in the RF
spectrum.
“All previous demonstrations
of Rydberg atomic sensors have only been able to sense small and
specific regions of the RF spectrum, but our sensor now operates continuously
over a wide frequency range for the first time,” said Dr. Kevin Cox, a
researcher at the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command, now known
as DEVCOM, Army Research Laboratory. “This is a really important step toward
proving that quantum sensors can provide a new, and dominant, set of
capabilities for our Soldiers, who are operating in an increasingly complex
electro-magnetic battlespace.”
The Rydberg spectrum analyzer has the potential to
surpass fundamental limitations of traditional electronics in sensitivity,
bandwidth and frequency range. Because of this, the lab’s Rydberg spectrum
analyzer and other quantum sensors have the potential to unlock a new frontier
of Army sensors for spectrum awareness, electronic warfare, sensing and
communications—part of the Army’s modernization strategy.
“Devices that are based on quantum constituents are
one of the Army’s top priorities to enable technical surprise in the
competitive future battlespace,” said Army researcher Dr. David Meyer. “Quantum
sensors in general, including the one demonstrated here, offer unparalleled
sensitivity and accuracy to detect a wide range of mission-critical signals.”
The peer-reviewed journal Physical Review Applied published
the researchers’ findings, Waveguide-coupled Rydberg spectrum analyzer from 0
to 20 GigaHerz, co-authored by Army researchers Drs. David Meyer, Paul Kunz,
and Kevin Cox
The researchers plan additional development to improve
the signal sensitivity of the Rydberg spectrum analyzer, aiming to outperform
existing state-of-the-art technology.
“Significant physics and engineering effort is still
necessary before the Rydberg analyzer can integrate into a field-testable
device,” Cox said. “One of the first steps will be understanding how to retain
and improve the device’s performance as the sensor size is decreased. The Army
has emerged as a leading developer of Rydberg sensors, and we expect more
cutting-edge research to result as this futuristic technology concept quickly
becomes a reality.”
Article: https://phys.org/news/2021-02-quantum-entire-radio-frequency-spectrum.html
Journal article: https://journals.aps.org/prapplied/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevApplied.15.014053
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