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Communications Hardware Technology

Get Ready For Atomic Radio (technologyreview.com) 125

An anonymous reader quotes a report from MIT Technology Review: David Anderson at Rydberg Technologies in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and a couple of colleagues, have reinvented the antenna from scratch. Their new device works in an entirely different way from conventional antennas, using a laser to measure the way radio signals interact with certain types of atoms. The secret sauce in the new device is Rydberg atoms. These are cesium atoms in which the outer electrons are so excited that they orbit the nucleus at great distance. At these distances, the electrons' potential energy levels are extremely closely spaced, and this gives them special properties. Indeed, any small electric field can nudge them from one level to another. Radio waves consist of alternating electric fields that readily interact with any Rydberg atoms they come across. This makes them potential sensors.

But how to detect this interaction? A gas made of Rydberg atoms has another property that turns out to be useful -- it can be made transparent by a laser tuned to a specific frequency. This laser essentially saturates the gas's ability to absorb light, allowing another laser beam to pass through it. However, the critical frequency at which this happens depends crucially on the properties of the Rydberg atoms in the gas. When these atoms interact with radio waves, the critical frequency changes in response. That's the basis of the radio detection. Anderson and co create a gas of cesium atoms excited into Rydberg states. They then use a laser tuned to a specific frequency to make the gas transparent. Finally, they shine a second laser through the gas and measure how much light is absorbed, to see how the transparency varies with ambient radio waves. The signal from a simple light-sensitive photodiode then reveals the way the radio signals are frequency modulated or amplitude modulated.
The atomic radio can detect a huge range of signals -- over four octaves from the C band to the Q band, or wavelengths from 2.5 to 15 centimeters. It also should be less insensitive to electromagnetic interference due to its lack of conventional radio circuitry. "The atomic radio wave receiver operates by direct real-time optical detection of the atomic response to AM and FM baseband signals, precluding the need for traditional de-modulation and signal-conditioning electronics," say Anderson and co.
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Get Ready For Atomic Radio

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Huh?

  • by 14erCleaner ( 745600 ) <FourteenerCleaner@yahoo.com> on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @07:25PM (#57253770) Homepage Journal
    That should be "more or less insensitive", not "more insensitive".
    • Oops, I meant "less insensitive". Hoist by my own petard! (Will /. ever allow comment editting? But I digress....)
      • I came here to point out A Mistake on the Internet, and was pleased to get a double dose! I'm glad /. doesn't allow edits :)

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @09:26PM (#57254244)

      I interpreted it as "less sensitive" which would be correct.

      There are lots of different kinds of interference. In a good radio system, noise from the radio's electronics should be a minor component, dominated by thermal noise, to say nothing of "interference" which is other legitimate radio waves that just happen to not be of interest to the operator. This system would probably have less electronic noise, but could easily have worse thermal noise.

  • Why is this better than current radio?
    • filtering.

      basically you use laser 1 to make the gas "sensitive" to a very specific frequency. then you use a second laser with an optical sensor to identify the minute differences which can be demodulated into audio or digital signals, or whatever is useful.
    • Why is this better than current radio?

      Reading TFA, it isn't better. So we're going to replace a compact radio with a tube of cesium and lasers? This is exceptionally interesting, but trying to see the practicality of it is a non-starter.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        An antenna the size of a grain of rice versus being measured in feet and you don't see the practicality?

      • One antenna covering a huge range of frequencies, rather than many. As the article says, a normal antenna is one or more conductors, each 1/2 wavelength long. If you have many bands, such as the cellphone system, then you need one antenna for each band.

        With high bandwidths, such as will be used for 5G, you are into the sweet spot for this technology.

        In other words, this has potential.

        • But it's receive only, not really useful for a communication device.

          • Good point. However, receive and transmit antennae are normally separate anyway. You use a multi-element receive antenna, but a single element transmit antenna. If you can replace all of your multi-element receive antennae with a single, smaller one, that's still a big win in terms of tower real-estate.
            • Good point. However, receive and transmit antennae are normally separate anyway. You use a multi-element receive antenna, but a single element transmit antenna. If you can replace all of your multi-element receive antennae with a single, smaller one, that's still a big win in terms of tower real-estate.

              Actually... This is not true. The same antenna is used for receive and transmit all the time. You have both full duplex (RX and TX at the same time) and half Duplex applications that do this.

              Your local cell tower and cell phone is a perfect example of this. My local Ham radio repeater does full duplex every time it's keyed.

            • Good point. However, receive and transmit antennae are normally separate anyway. You use a multi-element receive antenna, but a single element transmit antenna. If you can replace all of your multi-element receive antennae with a single, smaller one, that's still a big win in terms of tower real-estate.

              Could you show me an implementation of what you consider a normal antenna array?

              I'll bounce that off of a friend who owns a communication company. None of his sites are normal it would appear, so he apparently need some expert help.

              Why oh why would you ever want to use an antenna of only one element while you had a nice gain antenna on the same frequency? If you are using the directivity the multi element provides, you will be hearing signals that the monopole might not have enough power to get back

          • But it's receive only, not really useful for a communication device.

            But great potential for radioastronomy.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          If you have many bands, such as the cellphone system, then you need one antenna for each band.

          Yeah, but the antennas are so tiny that it doesn't really matter.

        • The size of an antenna is determined by the wavelength being received or transmitted. It's far from clear how this technology changes that.

        • One antenna covering a huge range of frequencies, rather than many. As the article says, a normal antenna is one or more conductors, each 1/2 wavelength long.

          Actually, their dipole is two opposed elements that are a quarter wavelength each element, but that's a drastic simplification.

          If you have many bands, such as the cellphone system, then you need one antenna for each band.

          With high bandwidths, such as will be used for 5G, you are into the sweet spot for this technology.

          In other words, this has potential.

          For the purpose of simplification, let's assume that you want to make a dipole at 1 GHz. The total wavelength at that frequency is roughly 300 mm. So a dipole antenna would be around 150 mm each leg.

          Now with the antennas being so small, we often add gain to them by making a Yagi-Uda antenna. This has a driven element, an element behind it, and usually one or more elements in fro

      • yeah, let's all judge the potential of new tech by its first clunky prototype.

        • yeah, let's all judge the potential of new tech by its first clunky prototype.

          Every few years, there is some "major breakthrough" in antennas. Almost all turn out to be major fails. I remember the Rutgers antenna that they claimed the prototype was so efficient that it melted when they pumped 100 watts through it! They actually said that, despite the fct that converting RF energy into heat was the exact opposite of efficiency. Then there was the Italian circularly polarized dish antenna that supposedly did it's polarization by virtue of putting a spiral shape on the dish. Then there

    • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @07:58PM (#57253916) Journal

      Why is this better than current radio?

      Replace an antenna the size of your hand, your arm, rabbit ears, a tower, ... with something you can mount on a chip in a tiny package on a PC board.

      Get rid of the noise, intermodulation, and other pathologies in the high gain amplification and filtering of the tiny amount of energy picked up by that antenna, substituting a direct quantum-mechanical readout of the field, with high signal strength, only competing with noise from variations in the lasers' output as your starting point, feeding a strong signal to a more ordinary amplifier.

      If it works out it could be a big deal in a tiny package.

      • Its not clear from the article what the effective collection area or noise temperature is for this. Its possible that it works with laser cooled atoms to provide an extremely low noise receiver that could be useful for scientific applications.

        That said, they seem to be measuring ~6V/M field levels, which is far larger than the signals received by conventional radios. (usually micro-volts/meter), so its not clear what they would do to improve the power sensitivity by ~12 orders of magnitude.

        Still, its sort o

      • For terrestrial radio, sky noise is greater than the noise of electronics up to about 200 MHz. There's no possibility for improvement in signal to noise ratio below that frequency.
      • It's got one minor drawback.
        It can only receive signals.
        Good for broadcast, not so good for anything requiring two way communication, like pretty much everything except TV and radio.

        • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday September 05, 2018 @01:19AM (#57254916) Journal

          It can only receive signals.
          Good for broadcast, not so good for anything requiring two way communication,

          Transmitting with a tiny antenna is easy. You use the same amount of energy as with a big antenna, but with a little antenna the energy density is much higher. As long as you make the impedance match properly, so all the energy is launched, you're fine, regardless of the area of the antenna.

          One antenna I'm working with currently is for BLE - on the 2.4G band. The quarter-wavelength there is about 1 1/4 ". But the antenna is mostly a chip of ceramic, with some horrendously high permittivity. (Ceramics can get to 6k or so, though I haven't computed the scale of this thing to estimate its permittivity.) So the quarter-wavelength, in and immediately around the chip, is scaled down in proportion, making the antenna about the same length as a surface-mount capacitor, though substantially narrower. The energy density is also scaled up (in proportion squared), and by the time the wave has expanded to the size of a free-air quarter-wavelength antenna the energy density is down to just that of the larger antenna.

          On the receiving side it still works - sort of. But the energy density of the incoming wave doesn't scale up at all when the antenna shrinks. So it intercepts only the tiny amount of energy that passes within a scaled-down quarter-wavelength around the scaled-down antenna, rather than that passing withing a free-air quarter wavelength of a free-air quarter wavelength metallic conductor.

          So one of these for transmitting and one of the invention for receiving (if it also works at such a tiny size) and you have your ultraminiaturized two-way system.

        • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

          GPS/Glonass/Galileo receivers would be another one.

        • gps?
      • If it works out it could be a big deal in a tiny package.

        Especially for radar.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's not that it's "better" but a completely new method of detecting radio waves. Radio receivers haven't really changed all that much since the invention of the transistor, mostly it's been miniaturization more than anything.

      This receiver would fall under the category of basic research, not a practical receiver.

    • by jezwel ( 2451108 )
      This is News for Nerds, it doesn't have to be better. The additional complexity to do the same thing in a potentially much smaller package helps.
  • I mean really that's about the equivalent of turning an electron gas into your antenna. Still will need signal conditioning and demodulation though unless it's very linear.

  • Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bjwest ( 14070 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @07:40PM (#57253828)

    reinvented the antenna from scratch

    The battery was reinvented, due to it's first development, in what is now modern day Iran, being lost over time. The antenna, however, has not been forgotten so could not have been "reinvented". Redesigned, perhaps, or a new type of antenna may have been invented, but the antenna on my roof is still there, and is still a variation of the first dipole antenna invented by Heinrich Hertz. This seems to be a variation of the phased array, just on a molecular scale, who's development has been filtered through the marketing department.

    • I think they are using the Wells Fargo definition.
    • Why do you hate innovation from the innovating innovators? Is it because you are afraid of change?

    • No, it was not redesigned. This is a completely new invention that happens to serve the same purpose. The term "reinvented" is absolutely applicable in this case.
    • reinvented the antenna from scratch

      The battery was reinvented, due to it's first development, in what is now modern day Iran, being lost over time. The antenna, however, has not been forgotten so could not have been "reinvented". Redesigned, perhaps, or a new type of antenna may have been invented, but the antenna on my roof is still there, and is still a variation of the first dipole antenna invented by Heinrich Hertz. This seems to be a variation of the phased array, just on a molecular scale, who's development has been filtered through the marketing department.

      It's become a fairly common usage now.

      If someone is said to have "reinvented" the sitcom, it doesn't mean (despite evidence to the contrary, badum ching) that we have forgotten how to make sitcoms. It means that someone has come up with a radical new version of the type.

    • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

      The antenna, however, has not been forgotten so could not have been "reinvented". Redesigned, perhaps, or a new type of antenna may have been invented, but the antenna on my roof is still there, and is still a variation of the first dipole antenna invented by Heinrich Hertz.

      reinvent [oxforddictionaries.com]: "Change (something) so much that it appears to be entirely new."

      The antenna could very well have been reinvented, so long as one's ego is small enough to realize that they are not the sole arbiter of the meaning of common words

      • by bjwest ( 14070 )

        reinvent [oxforddictionaries.com]: "Change (something) so much that it appears to be entirely new."

        If you change something so much that it appears to be an entirely new thing, it IS an entirely new thing.

        FTFS: "Their new device works in an entirely different way from conventional antennas, using a laser to measure the way radio signals interact with certain types of atoms."

        The invention of the LCD panel didn't reinvent the display tube, it replaced it with an entirely different method, which just happened to provide the same function. Same thing here. Using cesium atoms in a container, excited by two lasers, they were able to detect radio waves by the change in frequency of the atoms in that gas. That, by the way, was where I was getting the phased array analogy from.

        • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

          If you change something so much that it appears to be an entirely new thing, it IS an entirely new thing.

          Again, you do not determine what words mean. The community determines what words mean. What has been done fits within the commonly accepted meaning of the term "reinvented," ergo you cannot properly say that "the antenna could not have been 'reinvented.'"

          The invention of the LCD panel didn't reinvent the display tube

          But it did reinvent the electronic display.

          It replaced it with an entirely different me

  • Finally... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by galabar ( 518411 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @07:54PM (#57253892)
    actual news for nerds!
  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @08:25PM (#57254026) Journal
    Should be the Zoidberg atoms, not the Rydberg atoms...
  • by Tough Love ( 215404 ) on Tuesday September 04, 2018 @08:34PM (#57254046)

    It's not a new form of radio, it is a new form of radio receiver.

  • Clearchannel (oops, iheart) sprays shit over 4 octaves of spectrum, instead of just the FM band.

    Forgive me for preferring my CDs and USB device over your "radio".
  • Read the article a few times. This is pretty amazing stuff. Truly ingenious way of looking at the task

  • The bottleneck for two-way communication is generally the return channel of the mobile device. Is this going to help with efficiency at that end, or is this inherently a one-way process? It would seem to me that the process inherently includes an opto-isolator, which makes the process irreversible. It will still help by pushing the noise floor down on the receive end, but if we're still stuck with the same old transmit antennas we have now, this design isn't going to make phones any smaller since it can't r

    • by Knightman ( 142928 ) on Wednesday September 05, 2018 @03:38AM (#57255248)

      You can make the transmitting antenna very small compared to the receiving antenna.

      An analogy would be spraying water from a hose (transmitting) where the diameter can very small and the water exits at a much higher speed (energy density). To receive the water in useful quantities you can't use a funnel with the same size as the hose, instead you need to scale the funnel up many magnitudes (size dependent on the distance between the hose and the funnel)..

      The atomic receiver in this scenario is equivalent to a funnel that's actually smaller than the hose regardless of the distance between the two.

  • very cool idea.

    nowhere even remotely as good as a modern receiver IC.

    but very cool idea.

  • I think I just had a StarTrek moment here. The concept is simple and elegant (obviously practical aspects aren't quite as simple but certainly far from undoable) A combination of shit we already knew and already had to do something nobody thought of yet.

    I may be in love here to a degree that I wont even ask for when we can expect this to be commercially available ;).

  • I stopped listening to Radio1 when Chris Moyles left the breakfast show anyway.
  • What gets me most excited about this is that the receiving element is tiny- if they can also be made dense- and it looks like there are elements that can be shared among multiple receivers to increase density. A dense set of antennas allows for very directional beamforming, and IIRC, this is a sufficient way to have an extremely accurate directional receiver. The Coherence of the laser should even help with that. Their photodiode as a demodulator is primitive, but a start.

  • It's truly a remarkable invention, everything relies on wireless transmission nowadays. From this brief description it suggests that this new antenna is not only very wide band but also very sensitive (not to mention the size). I hope it will get into market soon, it will revolutionize communication not only on Earth but also between satellites. I also wonder an impact on radio astronomy, instead of huge heavy collector dishes one might imagine a field of these sensors (depending on its price and sensitivi

  • What is the sensitivity and latency using this method? Since it occurs at the atomic scale can we assume that the chance of getting real data throughput in the FM band quite good?

    What will be the impact on transmission power requirements given this heightened sensitivity? Will low power devices be as clear-reception as the type of power transmission hitting the airwaves when you tune into a radio station?

    The biggest downfall to 2.4ghz and 5.8ghz (aside from crowding and cross-talk interference) is the line

    • How did this get from C to Q band to AM/FM? Quite a leap, not mere octaves.

      Or do I have to wade through this to see that antenna tech that can span in one device from 55,000 to 2.5 cm?

      Yeah, that is impressive. Now to hook this into a SDR and have some real fun, if it's smaller than a camper.

      • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

        FM is a huge range actually, covering more than just public broadcast. But the article did mention both.

        "The atomic radio wave receiver operates by direct real-time optical detection of the atomic response to AM and FM baseband signals, precluding the need for traditional de-modulation and signal-conditioning electronics,"

        right now detection is limited to wavelengths from 2.5 to 15 centimeters ... which is 2Ghz - 10Ghz, definitely much higher than the 88 - 108 Mhz frequencies reserved for public radio broa

      • AM and FM are modulations, used in broadcast band communications. This technique (as described by the paper) can be used to play back signals that were modulated onto a carrier- changing the carrier's Amplitude and Frequency.

        • I understood that. More interesting was the assertion that this technology would be useful from 550m to 2.5cm. Or perhaps even broader application, it seems going from AM broadcast band to LW wouldn't be a big leap if you're going from upper microwave..

          • OK, Gotcha. As I understand it, more than anything, what the paper shows is a proof-of-concept that does away with traditional antennas (using electromagnetic waves to induce electron flow in a conductor), replacing it with monitoring something that is changing due to EM waves effect upon quantum states- making the wavelength of the electromagnetic wave irrelevant. Of course, this is my interpretation, but if it proves out- this is a very different way of doing things than we have been doing since Maxwell,

  • Increasing the sensitivity of the receiving antenna decreases the power requirement on the transmitter. Mobile phones have less of a problem receiving a signal from the tower than the tower does receiving from the mobile. Since the towers already report back the strength of the signal received, and the mobiles adjust power output as needed, a more sensitive antenna at the tower could have a positive effect on mobile phone use with no changes needed at the mobile. Saying that a new receiving antenna is us
  • What a f***cking complicated way to listen to your favorite FM station.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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