학술논문

Quantum Shot Noise Limit in a Rydberg RF Receiver Compared to Thermal Noise Limit in a Conventional Receiver
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Sensors Letters IEEE Sens. Lett. Sensors Letters, IEEE. 6(9):1-4 Sep, 2022
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Robotics and Control Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Signal Processing and Analysis
Radio frequency
Receivers
Symbols
Thermal noise
Electric fields
Laser noise
Time measurement
Electromagnetic wave sensors
rydberg RF receivers
5G receiver
electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT)
quantum shot noise
Rydberg RF receiver
thermal noise
wireless communications
Language
ISSN
2475-1472
Abstract
Electromagnetically induced transparency in a vapor of Rydberg atoms can be used for radio frequency (RF) electric field sensing. Such sensors can be traceable, tunable, compact, and electrically passive. One application for these electric field sensors is as a receiver for RF communications, converting a 5G transmission in free space to a modulated optical signal in a fixed network. Different figures of merit are used for an electric-field sensor and a 5G receiver; so it is not straightforward to determine under which operating conditions a Rydberg RF receiver may outperform a conventional antenna and receiver. Here, we consider two fundamental limiting sources of noise, calculating the quantum shot noise limit in a Rydberg RF receiver and comparing this to the thermal noise limit in a conventional macroscopic receiver. For a typical experimental setup, we show that the quantum shot noise can only fall below the thermal noise floor when the symbol rate is below 1−2 MSymbol/s. Higher order signal modulation will be needed to further increase data rate whilst using this constrained symbol rate to limit the fundamental noise floor.