Title :
Reciprocity-enhanced optical communication through atmospheric turbulence — Part I: Reciprocity proofs and far-field power transfer optimization
Author :
Shapiro, Jeffrey H. ; Puryear, Andrew L.
Author_Institution :
Res. Lab. of Electron., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract :
Deep (>;10 dB) long-duration (>;1 ms) scintillation fades, caused by propagation through refractive-index turbulence, are the principal impairment that must be overcome to realize Gbps-class laser communication over line-of-sight atmospheric paths in clear-weather conditions. Spatial diversity reception can ameliorate such fades, to a degree, but current systems typically rely on forward error-correction and interleaving to achieve reliable communication over the atmospheric channel. This paper, together with its companion [A. L. Puryear, J. H. Shapiro, and R. R. Parenti, “Reciprocity-enhanced optical communication through atmospheric turbulence - Part II: Communication architectures and performance,” to be submitted to J. Opt. Commun. Netw.], comprise a two-part study that introduces and analyzes an alternative approach, in which atmospheric reciprocity is exploited to eliminate the need for interleaving and minimize the amount of forward error-correction required. The present work (Part I) first describes the problem setting and then presents proofs for reciprocity principles - with and without phase compensation - that apply under rather general conditions. By specializing to the far-field regime, the optimum (power-transfer maximizing) phase compensation is identified. These results underlie the communication architectures and performance analysis that will be reported in the Part II paper.
Keywords :
atmospheric turbulence; forward error correction; optical fibre communication; optical links; optimisation; telecommunication network reliability; Gbps-class laser communication; atmospheric channel; atmospheric turbulence; communication architecture; far-field power transfer optimization; forward error-correction; line-of-sight atmospheric paths; phase compensation; reciprocity-enhanced optical communication; refractive-index turbulence; spatial diversity reception; Laser beams; Optical fiber communication; Optical propagation; Optical transmitters; Optics; Optimized production technology; Receivers; Atmospheric turbulence; Free-space optical communication; Phase compensation; Reciprocity;
Journal_Title :
Optical Communications and Networking, IEEE/OSA Journal of
DOI :
10.1364/JOCN.4.000947