Approaching the standard quantum limit of a Rydberg-atom microwave electrometer
Hai-Tao Tu, Kai-Yu Liao, Guo-Dong He, Yi-Fei Zhu, Si-Yuan Qiu, Hao, Jiang, Wei Huang, Wu Bian, Hui Yan, Shi-Liang Zhu

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a Rydberg-atom microwave electrometer that approaches the standard quantum limit, achieving high sensitivity by mitigating noise and optimizing parameters in a cold-atom setup.
Contribution
The study advances Rydberg electrometer performance by nearly reaching the quantum limit through noise reduction and parameter optimization.
Findings
Achieved electric-field sensitivity of 10.0 nV/cm/Hz^1/2 at 100 Hz
Reaches 2.6 times above the standard quantum limit
Minimum detectable field of 540 pV/cm
Abstract
The development of a microwave electrometer with inherent uncertainty approaching its ultimate limit carries both fundamental and technological significance. Recently, the Rydberg electrometer has garnered considerable attention due to its exceptional sensitivity, small-size, and broad tunability. This specific quantum sensor utilizes low-entropy laser beams to detect disturbances in atomic internal states, thereby circumventing the intrinsic thermal noise encountered by its classical counterparts. However, due to the thermal motion of atoms, the advanced Rydberg-atom microwave electrometer falls considerably short of the standard quantum limit by over three orders of magnitude. In this study, we utilize an optically thin medium with approximately 5.2e5 laser-cooled atoms to implement heterodyne detection. By mitigating a variety of noises and strategically optimizing the parameters of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
