Abstract

Atom-based radio-frequency (rf) electromagnetic field sensing using atomic Rydberg states is a promising technique that has recently attracted significant interest. Its unique advantages, such as extraordinary bandwidth, self-calibration, and all-dielectric sensors, are a tangible improvement over antenna-based methods in applications such as test and measurement and development of broad-bandwidth receivers. Here, we demonstrate how an optical-frequency comb can be used to acquire data in the Autler-Townes regime of Rydberg-atom-based electrometry in a massively parallel fashion, eliminating the need for laser scanning. Two-photon electromagnetically induced transparency readout and preparation of cesium is used for the demonstration. A flat quasicontinuous optical comb is generated with the probe laser at 852 nm using an electro-optic modulator and arbitrary waveform generator. A single-frequency coupling laser at 509 nm is tuned to the Rydberg launch state. An enhanced transmission signal is obtained using self-heterodyne spectroscopy, where the comb signal is beat against a local oscillator derived from the single-frequency probe laser on a fast photodiode. The transmission of each probe-laser comb tooth is observed. We resolve electromagnetically induced transparency peaks with line widths below 5 MHz, with and without laser locking. Radio-frequency electromagnetic fields as low as $66\phantom{\rule{0.2em}{0ex}}\text{\ensuremath{\mu}}{\mathrm{Vcm}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}$ are detected, with sensitivities of $2.3\phantom{\rule{0.2em}{0ex}}\text{\ensuremath{\mu}}{\mathrm{Vcm}}^{\ensuremath{-}1}{\mathrm{Hz}}^{\ensuremath{-}1/2}$. The method offers a significant advantage for reading out electromagnetically induced transparency and Autler-Townes splitting, as neither laser needs to be scanned and slow frequency drifts can be tolerated in some applications. The method enables the detection of the amplitude of a pulsed rf electromagnetic field when the incoming pulse Autler-Townes splits the electromagnetically induced transparency peak.

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