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PRISM

Photonic Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface Module — Metamaterial-based reconfigurable intelligent surfaces for adaptive beamforming and wavefront correction. Applications range from satellite communications to astronomical imaging.

COMSOL MATLAB PCB Design mmWave
PRISM reconfigurable intelligent surface with glowing metamaterial elements redirecting electromagnetic beams Conceptual visualization of PRISM's metamaterial reconfigurable surface

01Mission Statement

PRISM is JPL's most forward-looking project — a deep dive into programmable electromagnetic surfaces that can reshape how we communicate, sense, and image the world. Reconfigurable Intelligent Surfaces (RIS) are arrays of sub-wavelength elements, each individually tunable, that can collectively control the phase, amplitude, and polarization of reflected electromagnetic waves.

Think of it as a mirror that doesn't just reflect light — it decides where to send it. By electronically controlling thousands of metamaterial unit cells, PRISM creates surfaces that can steer beams, null interference, correct wavefronts, and even compute — all without any moving parts or active RF chains.

02Core Technology

03Specifications

28GHzOperating Frequency
256cellsSurface Elements
320°rangePhase Control
<1msReconfiguration

04Applications

"A surface that thinks about light. That's not science fiction — that's a Tuesday in the PRISM lab."

PRISM's technology has transformative potential across multiple domains. In 5G/6G telecommunications, RIS panels can extend coverage into dead zones without additional base stations. In satellite communications, lightweight RIS can replace heavy phased arrays. In astronomy, optical metasurfaces could enable next-generation adaptive optics for ground-based telescopes. And in radar and sensing, programmable surfaces create new possibilities for passive, low-power surveillance systems.

05Prototype Validation

06Research Roadmap

PRISM's next phase is a calibrated 16 by 16 surface with repeatable phase-state control and measured far-field steering. After that, the roadmap expands toward larger arrays, multi-beam operation, and integration with NOVA-style optical sensing.

The long-term ambition is a family of programmable surfaces that can serve communication, sensing, and adaptive optics workloads from one shared research platform.

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Interested in PRISM?

We're looking for RF engineers, metamaterial researchers, and photonics specialists.

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