Toward Quantum-Enhanced ISAC: Active-RIS-Aided Integrated Sensing and Communication with Rydberg Atomic Receivers
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 23:09 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Rydberg atomic receivers with active RIS enable a joint optimization that minimizes the CRB for DoA estimation in ISAC systems while satisfying SINR constraints.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Leveraging the magnitude-only and real-domain observation structure of RARE, a unified ISAC model is derived along with a closed-form CRB for DoA estimation. This enables a joint design of BS beamforming and ARIS reflection coefficients that minimizes the CRB subject to RARE-specific SINR and ARIS power constraints, solved via an alternating optimization framework combining SDR and MM approaches.
What carries the argument
The magnitude-only and real-domain observation structure of the Rydberg Atomic Receiver (RARE), which enables the unified ISAC model and closed-form CRB for DoA estimation used in the joint optimization.
If this is right
- The proposed framework outperforms conventional RF-based designs in terms of CRB minimization.
- The performance approaches that of a radar-only benchmark under the given constraints.
- The alternating optimization effectively handles the non-convex problem with SDR for beamforming and MM for ARIS design.
- RARE supports quantum-enhanced ISAC when combined with active RIS.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Such receivers might allow simpler hardware for sensing tasks in communication systems.
- Extending the model to multi-user or multi-target scenarios could reveal further gains.
- The closed-form CRB might facilitate real-time adaptation in dynamic environments.
Load-bearing premise
That the magnitude-only and real-domain observations of RARE permit deriving a unified model with closed-form CRB that accurately supports the joint optimization under the SINR and power constraints.
What would settle it
Measuring the actual DoA estimation error in an experimental setup with Rydberg receivers and comparing it to the optimized CRB value to check if the predicted performance gains materialize.
Figures
read the original abstract
In this paper, we investigate an active-RIS (ARIS)-aided integrated sensing and communication (ISAC) system with Rydberg Atomic REceiver (RARE). Leveraging the magnitude-only and real-domain observation structure of RARE, we first derive a unified ISAC model, along with a closed-form Cramer-Rao bound (CRB) for direction-of-arrival (DoA) estimation. Based on this formulation, we propose a joint design of the {base station (BS)} beamforming and ARIS reflection coefficients to minimize the CRB under RARE-specific signal-to-interference-noise-ratio (SINR) and ARIS power constraints. To tackle the resulting highly non-convex problem, we develop an alternating optimization (AO) framework that combines semidefinite relaxation (SDR) for beamforming and a majorization-minimization (MM)-based approach for ARIS design. Numerical results demonstrate that the proposed RARE-aware framework significantly outperforms conventional RF-based designs and achieves performance close to the radar-only benchmark, highlighting the potential of RARE for quantum-enhanced ISAC with ARIS.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper proposes an active-RIS (ARIS)-aided ISAC system employing Rydberg atomic receivers (RARE). It derives a unified ISAC model and a closed-form CRB for DoA estimation that exploits the magnitude-only, real-domain observation structure of RARE. A joint optimization of BS beamforming and ARIS reflection coefficients is formulated to minimize the CRB subject to RARE-specific SINR and ARIS power constraints; the non-convex problem is solved via an alternating optimization framework combining SDR and MM. Numerical results are presented showing that the RARE-aware design outperforms conventional RF-based ISAC and approaches the radar-only benchmark.
Significance. If the closed-form CRB derivation is exact and the optimization framework is free of hidden fitting or approximation bias, the work would establish a concrete pathway for quantum-enhanced receivers in ISAC, offering both theoretical tractability and demonstrated performance gains over RF baselines. The combination of magnitude-only observations with active RIS phase control is a distinctive technical contribution that could stimulate follow-on research in atomic-physics-assisted sensing and communications.
major comments (2)
- [CRB derivation (model and performance analysis sections)] The abstract states that a closed-form CRB for DoA is derived from the magnitude-only real-domain RARE structure. Because the likelihood under magnitude-only observations with multi-user interference and ARIS phase shifts is generally a non-central chi (or Rician) distribution, the Fisher information matrix does not admit a simple closed form without additional approximations (e.g., high-SNR Gaussian linearization or mean-field assumptions). The manuscript must explicitly state any such approximation, quantify the resulting bias in the CRB, and verify that the subsequent AO minimization remains valid under the same conditions; otherwise the reported performance advantage versus RF baselines rests on an unverified modeling step.
- [Problem formulation and AO framework] The joint optimization minimizes the CRB subject to SINR and ARIS power constraints. The abstract does not indicate whether the SINR constraint is evaluated with the exact RARE observation model or with an RF-equivalent approximation; any mismatch would render the feasible set inconsistent with the sensing metric being optimized.
minor comments (2)
- [System model] Notation for the RARE observation vector and the mapping from complex baseband to real magnitude-only measurements should be introduced with an explicit equation early in the model section to avoid ambiguity when the CRB is later derived.
- [Numerical results] The numerical results section should include an ablation that isolates the contribution of the closed-form CRB versus the AO solver itself (e.g., by comparing against a numerically computed CRB).
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the thorough review and valuable comments. We address each major comment point by point below.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [CRB derivation (model and performance analysis sections)] The abstract states that a closed-form CRB for DoA is derived from the magnitude-only real-domain RARE structure. Because the likelihood under magnitude-only observations with multi-user interference and ARIS phase shifts is generally a non-central chi (or Rician) distribution, the Fisher information matrix does not admit a simple closed form without additional approximations (e.g., high-SNR Gaussian linearization or mean-field assumptions). The manuscript must explicitly state any such approximation, quantify the resulting bias in the CRB, and verify that the subsequent AO minimization remains valid under the same conditions; otherwise the reported performance advantage versus RF baselines rests on an unverified modeling step.
Authors: We appreciate this observation. In the manuscript, the closed-form CRB is derived exactly by exploiting the real-domain magnitude-only structure of RARE observations, which allows us to model the observations as a real-valued vector and compute the FIM directly without invoking Gaussian approximations or other linearizations. The derivation accounts for the multi-user interference and ARIS phases through the unified ISAC model. We will revise the manuscript to include an explicit statement confirming the absence of approximations and provide the full derivation steps in an appendix for clarity. The AO framework is optimized under the same exact model. revision: partial
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Referee: [Problem formulation and AO framework] The joint optimization minimizes the CRB subject to SINR and ARIS power constraints. The abstract does not indicate whether the SINR constraint is evaluated with the exact RARE observation model or with an RF-equivalent approximation; any mismatch would render the feasible set inconsistent with the sensing metric being optimized.
Authors: The SINR constraint is formulated using the exact RARE-specific observation model, consistent with the unified ISAC model and the CRB derivation. Both the sensing (CRB) and communication (SINR) metrics are based on the magnitude-only real-domain structure of RARE. We will update the abstract and the problem formulation section to explicitly state this consistency. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation is self-contained from RARE observation structure
full rationale
The paper derives a unified ISAC model and closed-form CRB directly from the stated magnitude-only real-domain structure of RARE, then applies AO with SDR and MM to the resulting optimization under explicit SINR and power constraints. No self-definitional loops, no fitted parameters renamed as predictions, and no load-bearing self-citations or uniqueness theorems are present in the provided derivation chain. The central claims rest on standard Fisher-information and convex-relaxation techniques applied to the given observation model, which are independent of the target performance metrics. This is the normal case of a self-contained technical derivation.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Magnitude-only and real-domain observation structure of RARE
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