1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to optical communication systems and, more particularly, to reducing phase jitter in an optical communication system.
2. Description of the Related Art
In the propagation of optical pulses in ultra-long haul (ULH) applications, such as transoceanic transmission, numerous parameters associated with such transmission limit the capacity of the optical fiber cable system through which the optical pulses are transmitted. Pulse timing jitter is a major limitation to the maximum reach of ULH on-off transmission systems. For single-channel systems, a significant source of timing jitter is attributed to contributions from transmitter and receiver electronics, acoustic interaction effects, or especially, in the case of soliton transmission, to the Gordon-Haus effect. The Gordon-Haus effect is caused by the interaction of soliton pulses with amplifier spontaneous emission (ASE) noise present along the transmission medium. For multi-channel wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) systems, timing jitter is increased significantly by inter-channel soliton collisions. This collision-induced (CI) timing jitter is the dominant impairment of WDM soliton systems. Thus the search continues for other transmission formats that are less susceptible to timing jitter.
One such transmission format that has attracted attention is a differential-phase-shift-keyed (DPSK) modulation format. In a DPSK system (as well as other phase-shift keying (PSK) modulation formats, such as quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK)), information is encoded using phase differences between neighboring optical pulses (e.g., solitons). For PSK systems, however, the error-free transmission distance is limited by phase jitter, in which power shifts caused by ASE are converted into phase shifts by self-phase modulation (SPM). It is thus desirable to provide a practical and cost effective method and apparatus for reducing phase jitter in an optical communication system.
These and other deficiencies of the prior art are addressed by the present invention of a method and apparatus for transmitting a light signal in an optical transmission system. In one embodiment, an optical transmission link includes an input port and an output port. The optical transmission link is configured to propagate optical pulses from the input port to the output port. Information is encoded using phase relationships between adjacent ones of the optical pulses. A phase conjugator is disposed between the input port and the output port. The phase conjugator is positioned to reduce phase variance of the optical pulses at the output port.
So that the manner in which the above recited features of the present invention are attained and can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the invention, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to the embodiments thereof which are illustrated in the appended drawings.
It is to be noted, however, that the appended drawings illustrate only typical embodiments of this invention and are therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
A method and apparatus for reducing phase jitter in an optical communications system is described. One or more aspects of the invention are related to reducing phase jitter in a single channel differential-phase-shift-keyed (DPSK) optical transmission system exhibiting constant dispersion. Those skilled in the art will appreciate, however, that the invention may be used to reduce phase jitter in other types of phase-shift-keyed (PSK) optical transmission systems, such as multi-channel (e.g., WDM) and/or dispersion managed (DM) PSK systems.
The pulse modulator 112 modulates the optical pulse train in accordance with an output of the differential encoder 114. The differential encoder 114 encodes data from the data source 108 using the phase of the optical pulses of the pulse train. For example, every ‘0’ in the data may be represented by a shift in the relative phase of two adjacent optical pulses of π radians, and every ‘1’ in the data may be represented by a shift in the relative phase of two adjacent optical pulses of 0 radians (i.e., DPSK modulation). The output of the pulse modulator 112 is launched into the optical transmission link 150.
The optical transmission link 150 includes a section 116, a phase conjugator (PC) 118, and a section 120. The phase conjugator 118 divides the optical transmission link 150 such that the section 116 has a length z1 and the section 120 has a length z2. Each of the sections 116 and 120 may include one or more spans 124 of predefined length (e.g., 100 km). Each of the spans 124 may include an optical fiber 126 and an amplifier 128. In one embodiment, the optical transmission link 150 may exhibit constant dispersion (CD). As such, the optical fiber 126 of a given span 124 may be anomalous optical fiber. In another embodiment, the optical transmission link 150 may exhibit dispersion management (DM). In such an embodiment, each of the spans 124 may further comprise a dispersion compensating fiber (DCF) 130. The amplifier 128 of each of the spans 124 may be an erbium doped fiber amplifier (EDFA), Raman amplifier, or like type optical amplifiers, or any combination thereof. The phase conjugator 118 may be a parametric amplifier or like type phase conjugation device known in the art. At the output of the phase conjugator 118, the spectrum of the optical pulse train becomes a mirror image of the spectrum at the input of the phase conjugator 118. In other words, the optical channel undergoes a spectral inversion. Operation of the phase conjugator 118 is well-known in the art.
As described above, the main impairment of PSK optical transmission systems is phase jitter, in which power fluctuations caused by amplifier noise are converted into phase fluctuations by self-phase modulation (SPM). For purposes of clarity by example, the effects of phase jitter within a single-channel soliton transmission system is illustrated below. Notably, provided that the overall length, z, of the optical transmission link 150 is much longer that the dispersion length, the soliton condition is maintained adiabatically and the growth of the normalized soliton power- and phase-perturbations is governed approximately by the following correlation equations:
dzp2=σp, (1)
dzpφ=
dzφ2=σφ+2
where dz indicates a derivative with respect to z, denotes an ensemble average, p2 is the power variance, φ2 is the phase variance, pφ is the correlation between power and phase, σp is the strength of noise-induced power kicks, σφ≈σp/4 is the strength of noise-induced phase kicks, and
Let z0 be the initial soliton position and let z1 be any subsequent position. Then, integrating Equations (1) through (3) yields the following:
Suppose that the input solitons are unperturbed. Then Equations (4) through (6) are consistent with the standard results that the power variance grows with increasing z, and the phase variances grows (asymptotically) as z3/3. As is apparent to those skilled in the art, the rapid growth of the phase variance limits the transmission distance of a DPSK system.
Returning to system 100 of
As apparent from Equation (9), the phase conjugator 118 does not affect the growth of phase perturbations that are driven (directly) by phase kicks. The phase conjugator 118 does have an effect, however, on phase perturbations that are driven (indirectly) by power kicks.
Notably, in one embodiment, the phase conjugator 118 is symmetrically placed (“symmetric PC configuration”) within optical transmission link 150 (i.e., z1=z2). In such an embodiment, the output phase variance of the optical transmission link 150 (i.e., φ22) is proportional to z3/12, where z=z1+z2 is the total length of the optical transmission link 150. Thus, in the symmetric PC configuration, the phase variance is reduced by a factor of four. Suppose that phase jitter in the system 100 begins to cause errors at a critical distance zc along the optical transmission link 150. Then, by symmetrically placing the phase conjugator 118 along the optical transmission link 150, the maximal transmission distance of the system 100 is increased by a factor of 1.59.
In another embodiment, the phase conjugator 118 may be asymmetrically placed (“asymmetric PC configuration”) along optical transmission link 150 (i.e., z1≠z2). Let x=z1/z, then z2/z=1-x. Thus, the phase variance φ22 may be represented by the following:
where
v(x)=1−6x2(1-x), (11)
A standard minimization calculation shows that the optimal value of x is ⅔ and the corresponding minimal value of v is 1/9. As such, the optimal lengths of the sections 116 and 120 are z1=2z/3 and z2=z/3, for which the minimal phase variance is proportional to z3/27. Thus, in the asymmetric PC configuration, the output phase variance may be reduced by a factor of nine and the maximal transmission distance of the system 100 may be increased by a factor of 2.08.
It is clear from Equation (9) that the output phase variance of the optical transmission link 150 depends on the nonlinear phase-shift coefficient
p2c=p2, (12)
pφc=pφ+κp2, (13)
φ2c=φ2+2κpφ+κ2p2 (14)
The optimal phase-shift coefficient is thus:
The minimal phase variance is shown by:
Equations (15) and (16) apply to any system without a phase conjugator, or with one or more phase conjugators along the optical transmission link.
If the correlation between phase and power is greater than zero (i.e., there is no phase conjugator), then κ<0. If such a negative phase-shift is required, the NPSC 122 may be produced by cascaded quadratic processes or may be a phase modulator. If the correlation between phase and power is greater than zero, as it is in the system 100 having the phase conjugator 118 and z2<0.29z, then κ>0. If such a positive phase-shift is required, the NPSC 122 may be a section of highly nonlinear fiber (HNF).
In the symmetric PC configuration, the NPSC 122 reduces the phase variance of the system 100 by an additional factor of four (a total factor of 16). In the asymmetric PC configuration, the NPSC 122 reduces the phase variance of the system 100 by an additional factor of 12/11 (a total factor of 108/11). The performance improvements associated with on (a)symmetrically-placed phase conjugator, with and without an NPSC, are summarized in Table 1. In the column headings, S, A, and NC are abbreviations for symmetric PC configuration, asymmetric PC configuration, and NPSC, respectively.
Notably, an axis 402 represents phase variance, and an axis 404 represents distance in Mm. A curve 406 represents the phase variance without the presence of a phase conjugator. A curve 408 represents the phase variance with an asymmetrically placed phase conjugator (i.e., the section 116 has a length of z1=2z/3 and the section 120 has a length of z2=z/3, where z is the total length). A curve 410 represents the phase variance with a symmetrically placed phase conjugator (i.e., z1=z2). As shown, the output phase variance of the system 100 is reduced by using the phase conjugator 118 in both an asymmetric and a symmetric position along the optical transmission link 150.
In one embodiment, the phase conjugators 208 and 210 are symmetrically placed along the optical transmission link 150 and are separated by equal distances (i.e., z1=z2=z3=z/3) (“symmetric and equal PC configuration”). As such, the phase variance at the output of the optical transmission link (i.e., φ23) is proportional to z3/27. That is, the output phase variance is reduced by a factor of nine. In another embodiment, the phase conjugators 208 and 210 are symmetrically place along the optical transmission link 150, but are separated by unequal distances (e.g., z1=z3=z/4 and z2=z/2, although other section lengths may be employed) (“symmetric and unequal PC configuration”). In this embodiment, the phase variance at the output of the optical transmission link is proportional to z3/48. That is, the output phase variance is reduced by a factor of 16.
In yet another embodiment, the phase conjugators 208 and 210 may be asymmetrically placed along the optical transmission link 150. The optimal section lengths are z1=z2=2z/5 and z3=z/5, although other section lengths may be employed. Such a configuration yields a phase variance at the output of the optical transmission link 150 that is proportional to z3/75. That is, the output phase variance is reduced by a factor of 25. As with the embodiment shown in
Notably, an axis 502 represents phase variance, and an axis 504 represents distance in Mm. A curve 506 represents the phase variance without the presence of a phase conjugator. A curve 508 represents the phase variance with two symmetrically placed phase conjugators separated by unequal distances (e.g., z1=z3=z/4 and z2=z/2). A curve 512 represents the phase variance with two symmetrically placed phase conjugators separated by equal distances (i.e., z1=z2=z3=z/3). A curve 510 represents the phase variance with two asymmetrically placed phase conjugators (e.g., z1=z2=2z/5 and z3=z/5). As shown, the output phase variance of the system 100 of
and the squared length is defined as
where n is the number of sections 304. Since y2n+1=x2n+1−y2n, one can show that:
For symmetrically placed phase conjugators 302 of equal separation, the phase variance may be represented as follows:
where the first term on the right side applies to systems without an NPSC, and both terms on the right side apply to systems with an NPSC. For symmetrically placed phase conjugators 302 of unequal separation, the phase variance may be represented as follows:
With symmetrically placed phase conjugators 302 of unequal separation, NPSC is only possible for even n (odd n−1), and its effectiveness decreases rapidly as n increases. For asymmetric systems, which are obtained by removing the last half-sections from the corresponding symmetric systems of equal separation, the phase variance may be represented as follows:
In asymmetric systems, NPSC is always possible, but its effectiveness decreases rapidly as n increases.
For large values of n, symmetrically placed phase conjugators 302 of equal separation and compensated with an NPSC 122, symmetrically placed phase conjugators 302 of unequal separation, and asymmetrically placed phase conjugators 302 all perform comparably well. Let zi denote the length of a typical section between phase conjugators 302. Then in each case considered, the reduced phase variance associated with the power kicks is of order σp(
While the foregoing is directed to the illustrative embodiments of the present invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040264979 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |