• DocumentCode
    41553
  • Title

    Photon Information Efficient Communication Through Atmospheric Turbulence–Part I: Channel Model and Propagation Statistics

  • Author

    Chandrasekaran, Nivedita ; Shapiro, Jeffrey H.

  • Author_Institution
    Res. Lab. of Electron., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
  • Volume
    32
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    15-Mar-14
  • Firstpage
    1075
  • Lastpage
    1087
  • Abstract
    Optical communication with high photon-efficiency (many bits/photon) and high spectral efficiency (SE) (many bits/s-Hz) cannot be achieved unless multiple spatial modes are employed. For vacuum propagation, it is known that achieving 10 bits/photon and 5 bits/s-Hz requires 189 low-loss spatial modes at the ultimate Holevo limit and 4500 such modes at the Shannon limit for on-off keying with direct detection. For terrestrial propagation paths, however, atmospheric turbulence corrupts multiple spatial-mode operation. This paper derives power-transmissivity bounds and average intermodal crosstalks for the turbulent channel that depend solely on the mutual coherence function of the atmospheric Green´s function. These statistics are then evaluated for ~ 200 spatial-mode systems whose transmitters use either focused-beam, Hermite-Gaussian (HG), or Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) modes and whose receivers either do or do not employ adaptive optics. It is shown that: (1) adaptive optics are not necessary for achieving both high photon information efficiency (PIE) and high SE; (2) systems employing HG or LG modes achieve the same capacities through turbulence; and (3) the orbital angular momentum carried by LG modes does not provide turbulence immunity. In the companion paper [N. Chandrasekaran, J. H. Shapiro, and L. Wang, “Photon Information Efficient Communication Through Atmospheric Turbulence-Part II: Bounds on Ergodic Classical and Private Capacities,” J. Lightw. Technol., vol. 32, no. 6, pp. 1088-1097, Mar. 2014], the transmissivity bounds are used to quantify the turbulence-induced loss in PIE versus SE performance for these mode sets.
  • Keywords
    Gaussian distribution; adaptive optics; atmospheric optics; atmospheric turbulence; light propagation; optical communication; optical crosstalk; optical focusing; optical information processing; optical links; optical losses; optical receivers; optical transmitters; statistical analysis; stochastic processes; Hermite-Gaussian modes; Holevo limit; Laguerre-Gaussian modes; Shannon limit; adaptive optics; atmospheric Green function; atmospheric turbulence; average intermodal crosstalks; beam focusing; high photon information efficiency; low-loss spatial modes; multiple spatial-mode operation; optical communication; optical propagation statistics; orbital angular momentum; power-transmissivity bounds; terrestrial propagation paths; transmitters; turbulence-induced loss quantification; turbulent channel model; vacuum propagation; Adaptive optics; Crosstalk; Eigenvalues and eigenfunctions; Green´s function methods; Optical transmitters; Photonics; Receivers; Atmospheric turbulence; Hermite–Gaussian modes; Laguerre–Gaussian modes; free-space optical communications; photon efficiency; spectral efficiency;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Lightwave Technology, Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8724
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JLT.2013.2296851
  • Filename
    6695762