Rydberg atoms for radio-frequency communications and sensing: atomic receivers for pulsed RF field and phase detection
David Alexander Anderson, Rachel Elizabeth Sapiro, Georg Raithel

TL;DR
This paper introduces Rydberg atom-based RF sensors capable of detecting both the amplitude and phase of pulsed RF fields, enabling advanced applications in communications, radar, and antenna characterization.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel atomic RF sensor method for phase detection, expanding the capabilities of Rydberg atom-based sensing beyond amplitude measurement.
Findings
Demonstrated atomic RF sensors for phase-sensitive detection.
Enabled optical retrieval of RF phase information.
Applied sensors to communication and radar systems.
Abstract
In this article we describe the basic principles of Rydberg atom-based RF sensing and present the development of atomic pulsed RF detection and RF phase sensing establishing capabilities pertinent to applications in communications and sensing. To date advances in Rydberg atom-based RF field sensors have been rooted in a method in which the fundamental physical quantity being detected and measured is the electric field amplitude, , of the incident RF electromagnetic wave. The first part of this paper is focused on using atom-based -field measurement for RF field-sensing and communications applications. With established phase-sensitive technologies, such as synthetic aperture radar (SAR) as well as emerging trends in phased-array antennas in 5G, a method is desired that allows robust, optical retrieval of the RF phase using an enhanced atom-based field sensor. In the second part of…
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