Optical power monitoring using dual modulation
US-2018294614-A1 · Oct 11, 2018 · US
US9970973B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9970973-B2 |
| Application number | US-201715783419-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Oct 13, 2017 |
| Priority date | Jun 15, 2015 |
| Publication date | May 15, 2018 |
| Grant date | May 15, 2018 |
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A method is presented for measuring the electric field of electromagnetic radiation using the spectroscopic responses of Rydberg atoms to the electromagnetic radiation field. The method entails implementing quantitative models of the Rydberg atom response to the electromagnetic radiation field to provide predetermined atomic properties or spectra for field amplitudes and or frequencies of interest, spectroscopically measuring the response (spectrum) of Rydberg atoms exposed to an unknown electromagnetic radiation field, and obtaining the electric field amplitude and/or frequency of the unknown electromagnetic radiation by using features extracted from the measured spectrum and comparing them to features in a predetermined spectrum among the set of predetermined spectra.
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What is claimed is: 1. A method for measuring the electric field of electromagnetic radiation using the spectroscopic responses of Rydberg atoms to the radiation to be measured, comprising: calculating predetermined atomic spectra for atoms of a known type using non-perturbative Floquet theory; propagating an unknown electromagnetic radiation field towards the atoms, where the atoms are in a gas state and contained in a vacuum enclosure; propagating one or more light beams through the atoms, where at least one light beam is coupled to at least one Rydberg state of the atoms; measuring an atomic spectrum using the one or more light beams while the unknown electromagnetic radiation is interacting with or has interacted with the atoms; analyzing the measured atomic spectrum to extract spectral features; comparing the spectral features from the measured atomic spectrum to spectral features of the predetermined atomic spectra; and matching the measured atomic spectrum to a given spectrum in the predetermined atomic spectra, thereby quantifying one of field strength or frequency of the unknown electromagnetic radiation field. 2. The method of claim 1 wherein calculating predetermined atomic spectra for atoms of a known type using non-perturbative Floquet theory comprises a perturbative approximation to non-perturbative Floquet theory using second or higher-order perturbation theory. 3. The method of claim 1 wherein providing predetermined atomic spectra for atoms further comprises calculating the predetermined atomic spectra at a fixed frequency for a range of electric field values. 4. The method of claim 1 wherein providing predetermined atomic spectra for atoms further comprises calculating the predetermined atomic spectra at a fixed electric field for a range of frequencies. 5. The method of claim 1 wherein the atoms contained in the vacuum enclosure are maintained at a fixed temperature and density. 6. The method of claim 1 wherein a vacuum enclosure comprises a spectroscopic cell. 7. The method of claim 1 wherein measuring an atomic spectrum using the one or more light beams comprises measuring an atomic spectrum using electromagnetically induced transparency. 8. The method of claim 7 wherein measuring an atomic spectrum of the atoms further comprises propagating a probing light beam through the atoms, where the probing light beam has a frequency resonant with transition of the atoms from a first quantum state to a second quantum state; propagating a coupling light beam through the atoms simultaneously with the probing light beam, where the coupling light beam is overlapped spatially with the probing light beam, the frequency of the coupling light beam is scanned across a range in which atoms transition from the second quantum state to a Rydberg state; and detecting the probing or coupling light beam passing though the atoms using a light detector. 9. The method of claim 1 wherein comparing the spectral features from the measured atomic spectrum further comprises overlaying the predetermined atomic spectra onto the measured atomic spectrum and shifting the predetermined atomic spectra such that the predetermined atomic spectra aligns with the measured atomic spectrum. 10. The method of claim 1 wherein the spectral features extracted from the measured atomic spectrum includes one or more of peak heights, peak widths and relative peak positions. 11. The method of claim 1 wherein comparing the spectral features from the measured atomic spectrum further comprises overlaying the predetermined atomic spectra onto the measured atomic spectrum, shifting the predetermined atomic spectra in relation to the measured atomic spectrum so that the spectral features are in agreement, thereby yielding the field strength or frequency of the unknown electromagnetic field. 12. The method of claim 1 further comprises analyzing the measured atomic spectrum to extract peak positions and comparing the peak positions from the measured atomic spectrum to peak positions of the predetermined atomic spectra. 13. The method of claim 1 further comprises analyzing the measured atomic spectrum to extract peak positions and comparing the peak positions from the measured atomic spectrum to peak positions of the predetermined atomic spectra by overlaying the predetermined atomic spectra onto the measured atomic spectrum and shifting the predetermined atomic spectra in relation to the measured atomic spectrum until the peak positions in the predetermined atomic spectra fall within full width half maximum of the peak positions in the measured atomic spectrum. 14. A method for measuring the electric field of electromagnetic radiation using the spectroscopic responses of Rydberg atoms to the radiation to be measured, comprising: calculating predetermined atomic spectra for atoms of a known type using non-perturbative Floquet theory; propagating an unknown electromagnetic radiation field towards the atoms, where the atoms are in a gas state and contained in a spectroscopic cell; propagating one or more light beams through the atoms, where at least one light beam is coupled to a Rydberg state of the atoms; measuring an atomic spectrum using electromagnetically induced transparency while the unknown electromagnetic radiation is interacting with or has interacted with the atoms; analyzing the measured atomic spectrum to extract spectral features; comparing the spectral features from the measured atomic spectrum to spectral features of the predetermined atomic spectra; and matching the measured atomic spectrum to a given spectrum in the predetermined atomic spectra, thereby quantifying one of field strength or frequency of the unknown electromagnetic radiation field. 15. The method of claim 14 wherein comparing the spectral features from the measured atomic spectrum further comprises overlaying the predetermined atomic spectra onto the measured atomic spectrum and shifting the predetermined atomic spectra such that the predetermined atomic spectra aligns with the measured atomic spectrum. 16. The method of claim 14 wherein measuring an atomic spectrum of the atoms further comprises propagating a probing light beam through the atoms, where the probing light beam has a frequency resonant with transition of the atoms from a first quantum state to a second quantum state; propagating a coupling light beam through the atoms simultaneously with the probing light beam, where the coupling light beam is overlapped spatially with the probing light beam, the frequency of the coupling light beam is scanned across a range in which atoms transition from the second quantum state to a Rydberg state; and detecting the probing or coupling light beam passing though the atoms using a light detector. 17. A method for measuring the electric field of electromagnetic radiation using the spectroscopic responses of Rydberg atoms to the radiation to be measured, comprising: calculating predetermined atomic spectra for atoms of a known type using a perturbative approximation to non-perturbative Floquet theory using second or higher-order perturbation theory; propagating an unknown electromagnetic radiation field towards the atoms, where the atoms are in a gas state and contained in a vacuum enclosure; propagating one or more light beams through the atoms, where at least one light beam is coupled to a Rydberg state of the atoms; measuring an atomic spectrum using electromagnetically induced transparency while the unknown electromagnetic radiation is interacting with or has interacted with the atom
using optical probes, e.g. electro-optical, luminescent, glow discharge, or optical interferometers · CPC title
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