Information can be transmitted over directional point-to-point networks, such as aerospace and other mobile networks. In such networks, links can be formed between pairs of nodes, or terminals at each node, by aiming lens systems of each node pair towards each other. In some implementations, the nodes may transmit and receive optical signals through free space optical communication (FSOC) links.
Aspects of the disclosure provide a first optical communication system comprising a receiver lens system configured to receive a light beam from a second optical communication system remote from the first optical communication system, the receiver lens system being further configured to direct the light beam to a photodetector; the photodetector configured to convert the received light beam into an electrical signal, the photodetector being positioned at a focal plane of the receiver lens system; and a phase-aberrating element arranged with respect to the receiver lens system and the photodetector such that the phase-aberrating element is configured to provide uniform angular irradiance at the focal plane of the receiver lens system.
In one example, the phase-aberrating element is arranged between the receiver lens system and the photodetector. In this example, the phase-aberrating element is arranged closer to the receiver lens system than the photodetector. Alternatively, the phase-aberrating element is arranged closer to the photodetector than the receiver lens system. In another example, the phase-aberrating element is arranged such that in operation, a received light beam passes through the phase-aberrating element before passing through the receiver lens system. In another example, the system also includes one or more processors in communication with the photodetector, the one or more processors being configured to: determine a center point of the light beam received at the photodetector; determine an average irradiance of the light beam received at the photodetector; identify an average irradiance point of the light beam on the photodetector having the average irradiance; and send instructions for performing an adjustment to the optical communication system according to a difference between the average irradiance point and the center point. In this example, the system also includes a mirror, and the adjustment is an adjustment of the mirror. In addition or alternatively, the system also includes a lens, and the adjustment is an adjustment of the lens. In addition or alternatively, the instructions are configured to cause an adjustment to the received light beam such that the average irradiance point and the center point move towards one another. In addition or alternatively, the instructions are configured to cause an adjustment to the received light beam such that the average irradiance point and the center point overlap. In another example, the system also includes one or more processors in communication with the photodetector, the one or more processors being configured to use the electrical signal to control an aspect of the first communication system. In this example, the system also includes a mirror, and controlling an aspect of the first communication system includes adjusting the mirror. In addition or alternatively, the system also includes a lens, and controlling an aspect of the first communication system includes adjusting the lens.
Another aspect of the disclosure provides a method of controlling an aspect of a first communication device. The method includes receiving, at the first communication device, a light beam from a second communication device remote from the first communication device; passing the received light beam through a receiver lens system which focuses the light beam towards a photodetector; passing the received light beam through a phase-aberrating element before reaching the received light beam reaches the photodetector; receiving the received light beam at the photodetector which generates an electrical signal; and using the electrical signal to control an aspect of the first communication system.
In one example, passing the received light beam through the phase-aberrating element causes uniform angular irradiance at a focal plane of the receiver lens system. In another example, the received light is passed through the phase-aberrating element before the received light is passed through the receiver lens system. In another example, the received light is passed through the phase-aberrating element after the received light is passed through the receiver lens system. In another example, the aspect is a mirror. In another example, the aspect is a lens. In another example, the method also includes determining a center point of the light beam received at the photodetector; determining an average irradiance of the light beam received at the photodetector; and identifying an average irradiance point of the light beam on the photodetector having the average irradiance, and using the electrical signal to control an aspect of the first communication system includes sending instructions for performing an adjustment to the aspect according to a difference between the average irradiance point and the center point.
Overview
The technology relates to an optical architecture for producing an irradiance pattern on a position-sensing photodetector of sufficient minimum size and sufficient regularized irradiance, from nonuniform or time-varying irradiance input, such that its geometric center can be estimated accurately by the position-sensing photodetector system. In other words, the optical architecture may expand the minimum spot size achievable at the focus of the optical system, and may homogenize the energy received from the input, removing “hot spots” in the focused light beam that may be large enough to cause significant skew in the estimate of the center of the spot. Irradiance non-uniformity of the input may be caused by atmospheric turbulence, sub-aperture sampling of a nonuniform-irradiance beam, the presence of obstacles, etc. The intensity profile of the light beam being more homogenized may allow for more accurate tracking of the light beam for purposes of free-space optical communications.
The optical communication system may also include a phase-aberrating element. The phase-aberrating element may be positioned between the receiver lens system and the photodetector or before the receiver lens system and the photodetector. The phase-aberrating element may include a diffractive or refractive ordered or random array elements configured to diffuse the light beam incident on the position-sensing photodetector.
When the phase-aberrating element is included in the optical communication system, a tracking system of the optical communication system may be configured to determine an angle of arrival of the light beam received on the photodetector. The phase-aberrating element may create smoothened beam spot at the focal plane with a desired irradiance size and an irradiance profile centered around the geometric center of the beam. In other words, the phase-aberrating element may homogenize the incoming beam and smooth out any non-uniformities inherent to the incident beam irradiance profile. This may be achieved by overlapping the beamlets via the receiver lens system that pass through each of the microelements of the phase-aberrating element.
One or more processors of the optical communication system may control a mirror or lens to adjust the received light beam according to a difference between the average irradiance point and the center point. In another implementation, the one or more processors may adjust a pointing direction of the receiver based on the difference between the average irradiance point and the center point. Adjusting the pointing direction may comprise moving a gimbal that includes the receiver lens system, controlling a mirror or lens of the receiver lens system, or moving the overall optical communication system.
The features described herein may provide for an optical communication system that creates links that are more robust to atmospheric turbulence. Tracking of light beams may be more accurate because there are fewer inconsistencies caused by hot spots in the input light beam. The optical communication system may be more efficient as a result. A user of the optical communication system may experience better connection or coverage and transmit or receive data quicker.
Example Systems
Memory 130 stores information accessible by the one or more processors 120, including data 132 and instructions 134 that may be executed by the one or more processors 120. The memory may be of any type capable of storing information accessible by the processor, including a computer-readable medium such as a hard-drive, memory card, ROM, RAM, DVD or other optical disks, as well as other write-capable and read-only memories. The system and method may include different combinations of the foregoing, whereby different portions of the instructions and data are stored on different types of media.
Data 132 may be retrieved, stored or modified by the one or more processors 120 in accordance with the instructions 134. For instance, although the system and method is not limited by any particular data structure, the data 132 may be stored in computer registers, in a relational database as a table having a plurality of different fields and records, XML documents or flat files.
Instructions 134 may be any set of instructions to be executed directly (such as machine code) or indirectly (such as scripts) by the one or more processors 120. For example, the instructions 134 may be stored as computer code on the computer-readable medium. In that regard, the terms “instructions” and “programs” may be used interchangeably herein. The instructions 134 may be stored in object code format for direct processing by the one or more processors 120, or in any other computer language including scripts or collections of independent source code modules that are interpreted on demand or compiled in advance. Functions, methods and routines of the instructions 134 are explained in more detail below.
The one or more transceivers 140 may be configured to transmit and receive optical frequencies via cable, fiber, or free space. One or more additional transceivers may also be included that are configured to transmit and receive radio frequencies or other frequencies. The one or more transceivers 140 are configured to communicate with one or more other communication devices via one or more communication links. In
With a plurality of communication devices, the communication device 100 may form a communication network, such as network 200 in
Returning to
The photodetector may be a multi-pixel sensor or other types of position-sensing detector located at the focal plane of the receiver lens system. In certain instances, the pixel size and the gap distance between pixels of the photodetector may be such that a diffraction-limited light beam focused by the receiver lens system to the position-sensing detector may fall into a single pixel of the photodetector. For example, a width of the pixel added with the gap distance on either side of the width may be larger than a diameter of the focused light beam. In such instances, when a light beam is only received by one pixel of the photodetector, the accuracy of position estimate for the center of the light beam may be poor.
In order to improve the accuracy of the estimate of position of the center of the beam incident on the position-sensing device, the optical system shown in
The phase-aberrating element 310 may be a thin, transmissive element with a nonuniform transverse phase profile sufficient to induce angular spread of the rays incident on it. The phase-aberrating element may include a diffractive or refractive ordered or random array elements configured to diffuse the light beam received from the receiver lens system before the light beam travels to the photodetector. In some instances, the phase-aberrating element 310 may include a micro-lens array such as a quasi-random or random array of refractive and or diffractive microelements, such as holograms and phase gratings. The refractive microelements (i.e. micro-lenses) may be positive (piano-convex), negative (piano-concave) or a combination of both. Each micro-lens in the array should refract or diffract a small portion of the incident beam to cause an increase in angular divergence. The phase-aberrating element pattern may be formed directly into the phase-aberrating element substrate, or replicated on to the surface of the phase-aberrating element substrate. In some instances, the phase-aberrating element microelements may be small enough such that the incident beam intersects multiple microelements at any given position. In addition, the angular divergence of the phase-aberrating element 310 may be matched to the focal length of the receiver lens system 142 such that the resulting spot (measured at the plane of the photodetector 146) of homogenized light has a nominal diameter larger than a gap between the pixels of the photodetector and smaller than the diameter of the photodetector.
The phase-aberrating element 310 may be made of common optical materials including glass, plastic, silicon, silica, or quartz. In some examples, the phase-aberrating element may be made of other materials that are (i) at least partially transparent to the received light beam and (ii) are able to be formed into the required shape for the diffused beam angle.
The size of the phase-aberrating element 310 may be selected according to the input beam size as well as the desired spatial sampling. Higher spatial sampling may yield better beam uniformity at the focal plane. Increasing the beam diameter for a given phase-aberrating element may improve the phase-aberrating element performance. For an example, beam sizes for laser communication tracking application could range from 1 mm to 10 mm and the phase-aberrating element diameter could range from 2 mm to 25 mm.
Example Operations
At block 620, the received light beam passes through a receiver lens system which focuses the light beam towards a photodetector. For instance, at the communication device 100, the light beam may be directed, for instance via one or more mirrors (not shown), towards the receiver lens system 142 which focuses the light towards the photodetector 146. Referring to the example receiver lens system of
At block 630, the received light beam passes through a phase-aberrating element before the received light beam reaches the photodetector. Before or after passing through the receiver lens system, the light may also pass through the phase-aberrating element. For example, turning to
In each of the Examples of
At block 640, the received light beam is received at the photodetector which generates an electrical signal in response to receiving the received light beam. The photodetector 146 may be configured to detect light (or a light beam) received at the surface of the photodetector and may convert the received light beam into an electrical signal using the photoelectric effect. The one or more processors 120 may be configured to use the photodetector 146 to derive data from the received light beam and control the optical communication system 100 in response to the derived data.
At block 650, the electrical signal may be used to control an aspect of the optical communication system. The one or more processors 120 may be configured to act as a tracking system for the optical communication system 100. For example, the one or more processors may determine a center point of the received light beam on the photodetector. The one or more processors 120 may then determine an average irradiance of the received light beam and identify an average irradiance point of the received light beam. The average irradiance point may be a point on the photodetector 146 where the average irradiance is detected. As noted above, the phase-aberrating element 310 may create a uniform angular irradiance at the focal plane of the receiver lens system with a desired angular divergence.
When the phase-aberrating element is included in the optical communication system, it may create smoothened beam spot at the focal plane with a desired irradiance size and an irradiance profile centered around the geometric center of the beam. In other words, the phase-aberrating element may homogenize the incoming beam and smooth out any non-uniformities inherent to the incident beam irradiance profile. This may be achieved by overlapping the beamlets via the receiver lens system that pass through each of the microelements of the phase-aberrating element.
The one or more processors 120 may send instructions for performing or configured to cause an adjustment to the optical communication system according to a difference between the average irradiance point and the center point. For instance, the one or more processors 120 may control a mirror or lens of the optical communication system 100 in order to adjust the location of received light beam at the receiver lens system according to a difference between the average irradiance point and the center point. For instance, the mirror or lens may be adjusted in order to adjust the received light beam such that the average irradiance point and the center point move closer together or eventually overlap (e.g. are the same point).
In other instances, the one or more processors 120 may adjust a pointing direction of a receiver (e.g. part of the transceiver 140) that receives the light beam based on the difference between the average irradiance point and the center point. Again, the adjustment may cause the average irradiance point and the center point to move closer together or eventually overlap (e.g. are the same point). As an example, adjusting the pointing direction may comprise moving a gimbal that includes the receiver lens system 142, controlling a mirror or lens of the receiver lens system 142, or moving the overall optical communication system 100.
The features described herein may provide for an optical communication system that creates links that are more robust to atmospheric turbulence, sub-aperture sampling of an input Gaussian beam, the presence of obstacles, etc. Tracking of light beams may be more accurate because there are fewer inconsistencies caused by hot spots in the input light beam. The optical communication system may be more efficient as a result. A user of the optical communication system may experience better connection or coverage and transmit or receive data quicker.
Unless otherwise stated, the foregoing alternative examples are not mutually exclusive, but may be implemented in various combinations to achieve unique advantages. As these and other variations and combinations of the features discussed above can be utilized without departing from the subject matter defined by the claims, the foregoing description of the embodiments should be taken by way of illustration rather than by way of limitation of the subject matter defined by the claims. In addition, the provision of the examples described herein, as well as clauses phrased as “such as,” “including” and the like, should not be interpreted as limiting the subject matter of the claims to the specific examples; rather, the examples are intended to illustrate only one of many possible embodiments. Further, the same reference numbers in different drawings can identify the same or similar elements.
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Number | Date | Country |
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104833655 | Oct 2018 | CN |
Entry |
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