This application relates to optical communication systems, in particular obfuscation of transmitted optical signals to aid in security of signal transmission.
Optical transmission over a network can be subject to eavesdropping. It is possible to tap into an optical fiber and recover what is being transmitted on the fiber without the sender or receiver knowing that the fiber has been tapped.
The most common solution to address such eavesdropping is to employ the use of numerical encryption of data being sent over the network. Such encryption is generally performed in the digital domain before transmission. However, numerical encryption requires additional costs in processing power and overhead in establishing numerical encryption keys, as well as additional equipment and energy. Encryption can also be nullified, if the encryption keys used to encrypt the data are discovered.
An alternative to encrypting the data in the digital domain with an encryption algorithm or encryption key would be beneficial.
According to an embodiment of the disclosure there is provided a device including an optical mixer. The optical mixing device is configured to: receive N modulated synchronous optical signals, N≧2, having a same carrier wavelength; coherently mix the modulated synchronous optical signals and generate N mixed optical signals, each mixed optical signal including a respective component of at least two of the N modulated synchronous optical signals; and output each mixed optical signal on a respective physical channel.
According to another embodiment of the disclosure there is provided a method including a step of coherently mixing N modulated synchronous optical signals, N≧2, having a same carrier wavelength, to generate an equivalent number of mixed optical signals, each mixed optical signal including a respective component of at least two of the N modulated synchronous optical signals. A further step involves transmitting each mixed optical signal on a respective physical channel.
According to yet another embodiment of the disclosure there is provided a device including an optical mixer. The optical mixer is configured to receive N optical signals, N≧2, each on a respective physical channel, each optical signal including a respective component of each of at least two of N modulated synchronous optical signals from an originating transmission source; and coherently mix the received optical signals to recover the N modulated synchronous optical signals.
According to a further embodiment of the disclosure there is provided a method including a step of receiving N optical signals, N≧2, from N respective physical channels, each received optical signal including a respective component of each of at least two of N modulated synchronous optical signals from an originating transmission source. A further step involves recovering the N modulated synchronous optical signals by coherently mixing the N received optical signals.
According to still another embodiment of the disclosure there is provided a system including a transmitter, a receiver and at least two physical channels connecting the transmitter and receiver. The transmitter includes: a first optical mixer configured to: receive N modulated synchronous optical signals, N≧2, having a same carrier wavelength; coherently mix the modulated synchronous optical signals and generate N mixed optical signals, each mixed optical signal including a respective component of at least two of the modulated synchronous optical signals; and output each mixed optical signal on the at least two respective physical channels. The receiver includes a second optical mixer configured to: receive N mixed optical signals from the at least two physical channels; and coherently mix the received mixed optical signals to recover the N modulated synchronous optical signals.
Other aspects and features of the present disclosure will become apparent, to those ordinarily skilled in the art, upon review of the following description of the various embodiments of the disclosure.
Embodiments will now be described with reference to the attached drawings in which:
It should be understood at the outset that although illustrative implementations of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure are provided below, the disclosed systems and/or methods may be implemented using any number of techniques, whether currently known or in existence. The disclosure should in no way be limited to the illustrative implementations, drawings, and techniques illustrated below, including the exemplary designs and implementations illustrated and described herein, but may be modified within the scope of the appended claims along with their full scope of equivalents.
Aspects of the present disclosure involve coherently mixing information in a first optical signal with information from one or more other optical signals, the optical signals being synchronous, to generate a mixed optical signal that obfuscates the information of the first optical signal. Each of the other optical signals is likewise mixed with a combination of the first and/or other optical signals resulting in a collection of mixed optical signals, none of which resemble the original first and other optical signals. When each of the mixed optical signals is transmitted in a separate optical fiber, then eavesdropping on only a single fiber cannot yield an unambiguous recovery of any one of the original optical signals. Furthermore, if one or more fibers carrying a mixed optical signal are to be routed separately from the routing of other fibers carrying mixed signals, the possibility of eavesdropping at a single point along the transmission pathway and being able to recover any of the original optical signals is further reduced.
The expression “coherently mixing” is intended to mean that the optical signals that are being mixed are signals of a same carrier wavelength.
The expression “optical signals being synchronous” is intended to mean that the optical signals are aligned in time and the alignment needs to be maintained for recovery of the original signals at the receiver. As each mixed optical signal includes components of one or more other signals, the mixed optical signals must maintain a reasonable alignment in time in order that the components of each original signal from the mixed signals properly align when the mixed signals are mixed again at the receiver. As long as channels connecting respective outputs of the transmitter with respective inputs of the receiver are substantially the same length, or if the channels are routed differently, routes with a shorter path length are provided with an appropriate delay so that all paths from the transmitter to receiver are the same effective length for each channel, the original signals can be recovered at the receiver, with substantially the same relative alignment as when they were mixed at the transmitter. Otherwise, if the mixed signals do not arrive at the same time, then when the mixed signals are mixed together the original signals may not be recovered. In this particular definition it is not intended that the signals be specifically aligned with one another at a given reference point in time of the respective optical signals, such as at a packet boundary for instance, merely that the optical signals are being mixed in such a way that once the input optical signals are mixed together to create the mixed optical signals, discrete points in the mixed optical signals that were aligned in a time upon being mixed, should be mixed together again at the receiver when they are likewise temporally aligned. However, in some embodiments, two or more signals may be aligned with regard to a particular reference point within one of the optical signals.
Mixing information from different optical signals can be performed optically at the transmitter level and results in the total information of a given optical signal being divided into separate physical channels. This may include the optical signal being divided over at least two channels of the total number of channels up to all of the channels. The total information can be recovered for each optical signal by performing a mixing process that is the inverse to the mixing process that generated the mixed signals at the transmitter.
Referring to
In some embodiments, the transmitter elements 22,24,26,28 in
In the particular example of
Furthermore, the mixing may be performed such that each mixed signal does not include components of all of the input optical signals. For example, in a different implementation with six inputs to a collection of six couplers, six input optical signals are input to the inputs of three 4 port couplers in much the same manner as described above with regard to the four inputs applied to two 4 port couplers shown in
More generally, the number of inputs and the number of mixing devices may be limited by the number of inputs that are substantially equal in power that can be applied to a single mixing device and that provides a similar number of outputs that are mixed together such that each input is mixed with one or more other inputs. The expression of “substantially equal in power” is intended to mean that the inputs are close to the same power within an acceptable margin. This may be within 10 percent of each other in some embodiments or as much as 50 percent of each other in some other embodiments.
In addition to 4 port 3 dB couplers that have 2 inputs, 2 outputs and mix the inputs substantially equally if the input powers are substantially equal, there also exist 3×3 couplers that can mix three inputs of substantially equal power such that each output has a component of each of the three inputs in substantially equal portion. Such a 3×3 coupler and other N×N coupler variations could be utilized as mixing devices in embodiments of the present disclosure.
Referring once again to
In some embodiments where one or more optical fibers are routed differently from other optical fibers, and the lengths of the optical fiber are different for the different routes, there may be a time variable adjust element in the receiver 50, or collocated just prior to the receiver, in order to compensate for the difference in length and to keep the mixed signals temporally aligned with another. In some embodiments, a time variable adjust element could be located just after the transmitter or at a conveniently accessible location along the route.
While a phase changing element is shown optically coupled to each input of couplers 60,70 in
With reference to
The four mixed signals are routed through the physical channels between transmitter and receiver. When mixed by the arrangement of couplers that is the complement of the arrangement of couplers in transmitter, which in this case is the same arrangement as in the transmitter, the result is that the four original strings of bits can be recovered at the outputs of the third and fourth couplers 80,90 of the receiver.
As can be seen by comparing the power values in the plots of
In some implementations, as the number of optical signals that are mixed together increases, the resulting number of levels of quantized values in the mixed signals increases as well. With more levels of quantization in a same range of minimum and maximum power levels, there is a higher possibility of error in the recovered signal due to noise. Therefore, there may be some manner of trade-off between the number of optical signals that can be mixed together and error rate for the recovered signal, which may also be dependent on the type of elements used to perform the mixing, for example 3 dB coupler versus 180-degree hybrid coupler.
More generally than the examples described above, it may be considered that a transmitting device includes an optical mixer configured to receive N modulated synchronous optical signals, N≧2. The optical mixer is configured to coherently mix the modulated synchronous optical signals and generate N mixed optical signals. Each mixed optical signal includes a respective component of at least two of the modulated synchronous optical signals and the at least one optical mixing device is configured to output each mixed optical signal on a respective physical channel.
In some embodiments each physical channel comprises a separate optical fiber.
In some embodiments where N=4 and the optical mixer includes first, second, third and fourth optical mixing devices arranged such that the first optical mixing device receives first and second modulated synchronous optical signals and the second optical mixing device receives third and fourth modulated synchronous optical signals. A first output from the first optical mixing device is optically coupled to a first input of the third optical mixing device and a first output from the second optical mixing device is optically coupled to a second input of the third optical mixing device. A second output from the first optical mixing device is optically coupled to a first input of the fourth optical mixing device and a second output from the second optical mixing device is optically coupled to a second input of the fourth optical mixing device and outputs of the third and fourth optical mixing devices include the N mixed optical signals.
In some embodiments the mixing devices can be 3 dB couplers, 180-degree hybrid couplers, a combination of both types of couplers, N×N couplers where N≧3, or a collection of tunable couplers.
In some embodiments, the transmitter device may include N modulators, each modulator optically coupled to optical inputs of the optical mixer in order to generate one of the modulated synchronous optical signals by modulating an optical signal from an optical source.
In some embodiments the optical source is a single laser optically coupled to all of the N modulators. In some embodiments the optical source is two or more lasers, locked to the same carrier wavelength, and where each laser is optically coupled to one or more of the N modulators.
More generally than the examples described above, it may be considered that a receiving device includes N optical inputs, N≧2, wherein each optical input is configured to receive an optical signal from a respective physical channel. Each optical signal includes a respective component of each of at least two of N modulated synchronous optical signals from an originating transmission source. The receiving device also includes an optical mixer. The N optical inputs are optically coupled to the optical mixer. The at least one optical mixing device is configured to coherently mix the received optical signals to recover the N modulated synchronous optical signals.
In some embodiments the receiving device includes an optical phase adjust element optically coupled to at least N−1 of the optical inputs. In some embodiments the receiving device includes a time variable adjust element optically coupled to at least N−1 of the optical inputs.
In some embodiments where N=4 optical inputs, the optical mixer may include first, second, third and fourth optical mixing devices arranged such that the first optical mixing device receives first and second received optical signals and the second optical mixing device receives third and fourth received optical signals. A first output from the first optical mixing device is optically coupled to a first input of the third optical mixing device and a first output from the second optical mixing device is optically coupled to a second input of the third optical mixing device. A second output from the first optical mixing device is optically coupled to a first input of the fourth optical mixing device and a second output from the second optical mixing device is optically coupled to a second input of the fourth optical mixing device. Outputs of the third and fourth optical mixing devices are proportional to the N modulated synchronous optical signals.
An implementation according to an embodiment of the disclosure will now be described with reference to
At the transmitter, the phase values of the phase modulators 425a,425b,425c,435a,435b,435c can vary. In a particular implementation, however, the phase values may be φ1=π/2, φ2=0, φ3=π/2, φ4=π/2, φ5=0 and φ6=π/2. Values of the variable phase delay elements 439a,439b,439c,439d can vary dependent upon the system implementation. The phase values of the variable phase delay elements 442a,442b,442c,443a,443b,443c in the receiver may be dependent upon the phase values of the various variable phase delay elements at the transmitter. For example, in some implementations, the phase values of the variable phase delay elements of the receiver may be θ1=π−φ2+(τ0−τ1), θ2=π−φ2+(τ0−τ2), θ3=π+φ3−φ1+(τ0−τ3), θ4=π, θ5=0 and θ6=π.
In some embodiments, in addition to or instead of phase modulators 425a,425b,435a,435b shown in
With reference to
While a majority of the elements shown in the transmitters 410, 455 and receivers 445, 480 in
Furthermore, the examples of
With reference to
In some embodiments, transmitting each mixed optical signal includes transmitting at least one of the mixed optical signals on a physical route that is distinct from a physical route, or routes, on which all other mixed optical signals are transmitted. In some other embodiments each of the mixed optical signals travels on a physical route that is distinct from physical routes of each other mixed optical signal.
In some embodiments, where N=2, only a single optical mixing device is used. In some embodiments, where N=4, two optical mixing devices are used. The optical mixing devices could be either, or both, of four port 3 dB couplers and four port 180-degree hybrid couplers. In some embodiments the at least one optical mixing device could be a collection of tunable couplers with N inputs and N outputs that mixes the N input optical signals in a way that is complementary to the transmitter mixing device or devices so as to recover the original modulated synchronous optical signals.
In some embodiments, controlling polarization of one or more of the modulated synchronous optical signals can be used to enhance a level of obfuscation of the signals. For example, one or more of the original signals may have its polarization controlled before being mixed and polarization controller optical fiber may be used between the transmitter and receiver. In other embodiments all of the signals may have their polarization controlled and each of the optical fibers may be polarization-maintaining optical fiber between the transmitter and receiver. In some embodiments, the polarization may be changed dynamically, with the transmitter and receiver being coordinated as to the changing polarization, to add a further enhancement to the obfuscation.
With reference to
The channel mixing at the transmitter described above, which may be considered as an encoding process, is a process that can be expressed in a mathematical relation. For example, the encoding process is a linear transform that can be represented by a matrix M of dimension N×N. Input vector X includes N bits (a “word”), in which each bit represents an input for a respective channel of an optical mixer at a given time point in time. A resultant output of the mixer represented by vector Y is obtained by the operation Y=M*X.
At a receiver side, the inverse mixing is also a linear transform represented by an N×N matrix P. Thus the detected signal vector Z is expressed by the product Z=P*Y. Substituting in for Y from above, Z=P*M*X. For amplitude-modulation and detection of the signals, the information contained in the original vector X is recovered as long as the matrix product P*M results in a diagonal matrix. In other words, in the case of amplitude modulation and detection, there is no requirement for the matrix product P*M to equal to the identity matrix, for which both the amplitude and the phases of the signal vector would be recovered. The latter case may be applicable to phase-modulated signals; then the receiver matrix P should be the inverse of the transmitter matrix, P=M−1. The recovery of phase information may require additional phase elements before the receivers
In some embodiments, the method may further include providing phase compensation on at least N−1 of the physical channels when the optical signals are received at the receiver. In some embodiments phase compensation may be provided on all N of the physical channels.
In some embodiments, N is two and only a single mixing coupler is used. In some embodiments, where N=4, two optical mixing devices are used, as illustrated with regard to the coupler arrangements in
Numerous modifications and variations of the present disclosure are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the disclosure may be practised otherwise than as specifically described herein.