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Electric-field sensing with driven-dissipative time crystals in room-temperature Rydberg vapor

Darmindra D. Arumugam

2025Scientific Reports6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mode competition in nonequilibrium Rydberg gases enables the exploration of emergent many-body phases. This work leverages this emergent phase for electric field detection at room temperature. Sensitive frequency-resolved electric field measurements at very low-frequencies (VLF) are of central importance in a wide range of applications where deep-penetration is required in communications, navigation and imaging or surveying. The long wavelengths on order of 10–100 km (3–30 kHz) limit the efficiency, sensitivity, and bandwidth of compact classical detectors that are constrained by Chu’s limit. Rydberg-atom electrometers are an attractive approach for microwave electric-field sensors but have reduced sensitivity at lower-frequencies. Very recent efforts to advance the standard Rydberg-atoms approach is based on DC electric-field (E-field) Stark shifting and have resulted in sensitivities between 67.9 and 2.2 uVcm -1 Hz -1/2 (0.1–10 kHz) by fine optimization of the DC E-field. A major challenge in these approaches is the need for embedded electrodes or plates due to DC E-field Stark screening effect, which can perturb coupling of VLF signals when injected from external sources. In this article, it is demonstrated that state-of-art sensitivity ((1.60 ± 0.23) uVcm -1 Hz -1/2 ) can instead be achieved using limit-cycle oscillations in driven-dissipative Rydberg atoms by using a magnetic field (B-field) to develop mode-competition between nearby Rydberg states. The mode-competition between nearby Rydberg-states develop an effective transition centered at the oscillation frequency capable of supporting external VLF E-field coupling in the ~ 10–15kHz regime without the requirement for fine optimization of the B-field magnitude.

Topics & Concepts

Electric fieldRydberg formulaDissipative systemRydberg atomMaterials scienceField (mathematics)OptoelectronicsPhysicsThermodynamicsQuantum mechanicsMathematicsPure mathematicsIonizationIonQuantum optics and atomic interactionsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesRandom lasers and scattering media