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arxiv: 2604.09068 · v1 · submitted 2026-04-10 · 🪐 quant-ph

Continuous Quantum Aperture: Beamforming with a Single-Vapor-Cell Rydberg Receiver

Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 17:26 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords Rydberg atomsquantum aperturebeamformingvapor cell receiveratomic sensorselectromagnetic receptionlocal oscillator dressingreconfigurable antennas
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The pith

A Rydberg-atom vapor cell dressed by a local-oscillator field forms a continuous quantum aperture that produces directional beams from a single sensing volume.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper establishes that a Rydberg-atom vapor cell can serve as a continuous quantum aperture when dressed by a local-oscillator field. Spatially varying quantum coherence across the cell supplies continuous amplitude and phase control, so beam patterns form directly from one small volume instead of from a discrete array of antennas. This mechanism permits reconfigurable single-peak, multipeak, and multiband operation simply by changing the local-oscillator configuration. Experiments on a prototype receiver confirm that measured patterns match the predicted ones across different cell sizes, frequency bands, and local-oscillator settings. The approach is shown to support interference mitigation, multiuser access, and multiband multiuser access within the same compact platform.

Core claim

A Rydberg-atom vapor cell dressed by a local-oscillator field constitutes a continuous quantum aperture. In this regime, spatially-varying quantum coherence across the aperture provides continuous amplitude-phase control, allowing a directional beam pattern to emerge from one sensing volume rather than from an engineered array. Tailoring the local-oscillator field directly programs the aperture response, enabling reconfigurable single-peak, multipeak, and multiband beamforming within a single vapor cell. Experiments verify that practical beam patterns agree with theoretical predictions across aperture sizes, frequency bands, and local-oscillator configurations.

What carries the argument

The continuous quantum aperture, realized as a Rydberg-atom vapor cell whose local-oscillator field induces spatially varying quantum coherence that supplies continuous amplitude and phase control for beamforming.

If this is right

  • Reconfigurable beamforming becomes possible inside one vapor cell without fabricating or aligning an antenna array.
  • The same cell can be switched between single-peak, multipeak, and multiband patterns by adjusting only the local-oscillator field.
  • Interference mitigation and multiuser access are achieved by shaping the aperture response within the single cell.
  • Multiband multiuser access follows directly from the same local-oscillator programming that controls the beam shape.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The platform could be combined with existing Rydberg sensors to add spatial selectivity without increasing physical size.
  • Dynamic reprogramming of the local-oscillator field would allow real-time adaptation of the beam pattern to changing signal environments.
  • Scaling the cell dimensions or operating at higher carrier frequencies would test whether the continuous-aperture principle remains valid beyond the demonstrated regimes.

Load-bearing premise

That the spatially varying quantum coherence produced by the local-oscillator field can be modeled and controlled with sufficient accuracy that unaccounted effects such as atomic collisions, field inhomogeneities, or Doppler broadening do not distort the predicted beam patterns.

What would settle it

An experiment that measures angular response patterns for several local-oscillator configurations and finds statistically significant deviations from the calculated patterns at multiple frequencies or cell sizes.

read the original abstract

Beamforming is conventionally understood as a collective property of many discrete antenna elements in both communication and radar fields, which links angular selectivity to array size, element spacing, and band-specific hardware. Here we uncover a fundamentally different beamforming mechanism achieved by a Rydberg atomic receiver: a Rydberg-atom vapor cell dressed by a local-oscillator field constitutes a continuous quantum aperture. In this regime, spatially-varying quantum coherence across the aperture provides continuous amplitude-phase control, allowing a directional beam pattern to emerge from one sensing volume rather than from an engineered array. We establish the theory of continuous quantum aperture and show that tailoring the local-oscillator field can directly program the aperture response. This enables reconfigurable single-peak, multipeak, and multiband beamforming within a single vapor cell. Experiments on a Rydberg atomic receiver prototype verify that practical beam patterns agree with theoretical predictions across aperture sizes, frequency bands, and local-oscillator configurations. Leveraging this new beamforming mechanism, we further demonstrate interference mitigation, multiuser access, and multiband multiuser access with the single-vapor-cell platform. Our results identify the continuous quantum aperture as a new operating principle of Rydberg atomic receivers and establish single-vapor-cell beamforming as an integrated and reconfigurable platform for spatially selective electromagnetic reception.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

3 major / 3 minor

Summary. The manuscript claims that a Rydberg-atom vapor cell dressed by a local-oscillator (LO) field forms a continuous quantum aperture, in which spatially varying quantum coherence across the single sensing volume provides continuous amplitude-phase control. This enables reconfigurable beamforming (single-peak, multi-peak, multiband) from one cell rather than a discrete array. The theory shows how LO field tailoring programs the aperture response, and prototype experiments are reported to match theoretical predictions across aperture sizes, frequency bands, and LO configurations, with further demonstrations of interference mitigation, multiuser access, and multiband multiuser access.

Significance. If the central claim is validated, the work identifies a new operating principle for Rydberg receivers that could simplify directional reception hardware by eliminating the need for engineered arrays. The reconfigurability via LO dressing and the experimental demonstrations across multiple configurations are strengths; the approach offers a compact platform for spatially selective EM sensing with potential impact in quantum communications and radar. Credit is due for attempting to link dressed-state quantum optics directly to far-field beam patterns.

major comments (3)
  1. [Abstract and experimental results section] Abstract and experimental results section: The statement that 'practical beam patterns agree with theoretical predictions across aperture sizes, frequency bands, and local-oscillator configurations' does not indicate whether the forward model used for comparison incorporates position-dependent detunings, Doppler broadening, or collision-induced decoherence. This is load-bearing for the continuous-aperture claim, because any of these effects can distort the intended spatially varying coherence map in a thermal vapor.
  2. [Theory section on coherence model] Theory section on coherence model: The derivation of the spatially varying quantum coherence is presented as following from standard dressed Rydberg states, yet no quantitative assessment is given of the regime in which atomic collisions, field inhomogeneities, or velocity distributions remain negligible. Without such bounds, it is unclear whether the observed patterns confirm the clean continuous-aperture mechanism or require additional fitted terms.
  3. [Demonstrations of interference mitigation and multiuser access] Demonstrations of interference mitigation and multiuser access: The reported beam patterns and access performance are compared to theory, but the manuscript does not provide the explicit LO field parameters, measured raw data, or error budgets that would allow independent verification that the directional selectivity arises from the continuous coherence profile rather than residual array-like effects or unmodeled systematics.
minor comments (3)
  1. [Figures] Figure captions and axis labels could more explicitly state the LO field amplitudes and detunings used for each configuration to aid reproducibility.
  2. [Theory section] The notation for the coherence function and its mapping to far-field amplitude-phase could be clarified with an explicit equation linking the local coherence to the radiated pattern.
  3. [Introduction] A short discussion of how the continuous-aperture concept differs from prior Rydberg-receiver work on spatial selectivity would strengthen context.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

3 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the constructive comments. We address each major point below and indicate planned revisions to improve clarity and verifiability.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract and experimental results section] Abstract and experimental results section: The statement that 'practical beam patterns agree with theoretical predictions across aperture sizes, frequency bands, and local-oscillator configurations' does not indicate whether the forward model used for comparison incorporates position-dependent detunings, Doppler broadening, or collision-induced decoherence. This is load-bearing for the continuous-aperture claim, because any of these effects can distort the intended spatially varying coherence map in a thermal vapor.

    Authors: We agree that explicit specification of the forward model is necessary. The model computes the position-dependent coherence directly from the spatially varying LO field via the dressed-state optical Bloch equations; position-dependent detunings are included by construction. Doppler broadening and collision-induced decoherence enter through effective decay rates calibrated to the vapor conditions and are held fixed across comparisons. We will revise the abstract and experimental results section to state these inclusions explicitly. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [Theory section on coherence model] Theory section on coherence model: The derivation of the spatially varying quantum coherence is presented as following from standard dressed Rydberg states, yet no quantitative assessment is given of the regime in which atomic collisions, field inhomogeneities, or velocity distributions remain negligible. Without such bounds, it is unclear whether the observed patterns confirm the clean continuous-aperture mechanism or require additional fitted terms.

    Authors: The derivation assumes the standard dressed-state regime. We will add a dedicated paragraph supplying quantitative bounds: at the operating pressure the collision rate yields a decoherence time >> Rabi period; cell geometry keeps field inhomogeneity below 1% over the aperture; and Doppler averaging is performed explicitly while preserving the spatial coherence gradient that produces beamforming. These bounds show no additional fitted terms are required. revision: yes

  3. Referee: [Demonstrations of interference mitigation and multiuser access] Demonstrations of interference mitigation and multiuser access: The reported beam patterns and access performance are compared to theory, but the manuscript does not provide the explicit LO field parameters, measured raw data, or error budgets that would allow independent verification that the directional selectivity arises from the continuous coherence profile rather than residual array-like effects or unmodeled systematics.

    Authors: We will add a supplementary table listing the precise LO frequencies, amplitudes, and phases for every configuration. Error budgets and measurement uncertainties will be stated in the methods and shown as error bars on the relevant figures. Representative raw time traces will be included in the supplement. Control measurements with uniform LO fields (no spatial variation) produce flat patterns, confirming that directionality originates from the continuous coherence profile rather than array-like artifacts. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

Derivation chain is self-contained from standard quantum optics

full rationale

The paper derives the continuous quantum aperture from the spatially varying coherence induced by a local-oscillator field on Rydberg atoms, using standard atom-light interaction models. No load-bearing step reduces the predicted beam patterns or aperture response to a fit or redefinition of the same experimental inputs; the forward model is presented as independent of the verification data. Self-citations to prior Rydberg-receiver work exist but are not invoked as uniqueness theorems or to justify the core mechanism. Experiments are compared to theory without evidence that the theory was tuned to the reported patterns. This meets the criteria for a non-circular, externally benchmarked derivation.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 1 invented entities

The central claim rests on standard quantum-mechanical treatment of Rydberg atoms interacting with electromagnetic fields and the assumption that a local-oscillator field can impose the required spatial coherence variation. No explicit free parameters are stated in the abstract, though experimental fitting of beam patterns is likely.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption Rydberg atoms in a vapor cell respond to radio-frequency electric fields through quantum coherence effects that can be dressed by a local oscillator
    This is a standard premise in Rydberg electrometry literature.
invented entities (1)
  • continuous quantum aperture no independent evidence
    purpose: Conceptual model for spatially continuous amplitude-phase control arising from varying quantum coherence across the vapor cell volume
    New descriptive entity introduced to unify the beamforming behavior observed in the single-cell platform

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5555 in / 1378 out tokens · 59417 ms · 2026-05-10T17:26:29.901974+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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