DocumentCode
914590
Title
Atmospheric optical communications systems
Author
Kerr, J.R. ; Titterton, P.J. ; Kraemer, A.R. ; Cooke, C.R.
Author_Institution
Oregon Graduate Center, Portland, Ore.
Volume
58
Issue
10
fYear
1970
Firstpage
1691
Lastpage
1709
Abstract
The increasing sophistication of optical (and infrared) components and techniques, combined with rapidly expanding communication requirements, suggests that optical systems operating partly or entirely within the atmosphere may soon represent desirable solutions to real communications problems. The design of such systems will be strongly influenced by considerations of atmospheric turbulence, molecular absorption, and aerosol scattering. The most promising alternatives are heterodyne systems operating at the 10.6 µ wavelength, and direct-detection systems at near-infrared or visible wavelengths. Feasible links include horizontal, ground-to-satellite, and satellite-to-ground (or aircraft) geometries. System requirements and atmospheric effects are reviewed. Components, signaling, and diversity techniques which will partially overcome atmospheric limitations are discussed. Specific representative systems designs are presented.
Keywords
Aerosols; Aircraft; Atmosphere; Atmospheric waves; Electromagnetic wave absorption; Geometry; Optical devices; Optical fiber communication; Optical mixing; Optical scattering;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/PROC.1970.7990
Filename
1449920
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