The present invention relates generally to improvements in optical signal transmission. More particularly, the invention relates to advantageous systems and techniques for producing a series of pulses with a progressive phase shift.
Return to zero optical signal sources are frequently used in optical communication. The return to zero format has been proven superior to the non return to zero format both in terms of receiver sensitivity and in terms of fiber transmission performance. One particularly useful way to implement a return to zero optical source is to generate a series of optical pulses. The optical pulses may suitably be subjected to modulation using a data signal, in order to use the pulses to carry data.
Various ways of modulating optical pulses exist. For example, the intensity of the pulses may be modulated, or the frequency or phase of the pulses may be modulated. Choices are also available with respect to the stage in the process of pulse generation at which modulation is to take place. Modulation may occur during the process of pulse generation, resulting in the generation of pulses that are modulated or encoded with data, or pulses may be generated that do not carry any data, and may then be subjected to a modulation process so that they will convey information.
Numerous encoding systems exist that may be used to encode or modulate optical signals. One most commonly used modulation technique is on-off keying (OOK), which encodes the binary information by turning an optical pulse on and off to represent digital “1” and “0”, respectively. Another family of techniques that is particularly useful is phase modulation, in which information, such as binary bits, is encoded through the phase difference between succeeding pulses. Various modulation systems may be used, including differential phase shift keying (DPSK), of which
and minimum shift keying (MSK) are variants.
and MSK systems represent bits by phase differences of
between adjacent pulses. For example, a “0” may be represented by a phase difference of
and a “1” may be represented by a phase difference of
An additional technique that has been studied primarily in connection with OOK modulation is vestigial sideband (VSB) filtering. VSB filtering employs an optical filter with the center of its passband detuned either up or down by a predetermined amount in order to filter the optical signal and thereby reduce its bandwidth. The amount of detuning may suitably be approximately 10 GHz in cases where the desired bit rate is 40 Gb/s.
It has also been found that
including MSK, is analogous to DPSK with VSB filtering. Vestigial sideband filtering has drawn considerable interest, but it is difficult to implement under real world conditions. The reason for this difficulty is that the use of vestigial sideband filtering according to prior art techniques has required precise optical filtering. The filter center frequency, or wavelength, and the filter shape used in prior art implementations of VSB, are critical and difficult to achieve reliably. Therefore, in the prior art, VSB has frequently proven to be an interesting but impractical technique.
It is often convenient to employ electrically controlled devices for generating optical signals such as pulse streams. Such devices receive an optical signal as an input, as well as one or more electrical signals to influence the optical signal in order to produce an optical output having desired characteristics. The use of electrical control signals often provides a relatively simple and inexpensive way to produce the desired characteristics. Optical techniques, such as optical filtering, are frequently more complex and more difficult to control and more costly than electrical techniques.
There exists, therefore, a need for systems and techniques for producing an optical pulse stream using electrical control methods to provide desired characteristics of the pulse stream, with the pulse stream exhibiting desired phase characteristics, including phase characteristics that allow for the use of the pulse stream in both OOK and DPSK systems to achieve desired effects similar to that of optical vestigial sideband filtering.
An optical pulse generator according to one embodiment of the present invention comprises a Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) whose optical input is a continuous wave (CW) laser. A Mach-Zehnder modulator receives an optical signal and splits the signal along two optical waveguides. Two sinusoidal electrical signals are provided as the electrical inputs to the pulse generator, suitably through electrodes affixed to or incorporated in the two waveguides. The electrical voltage applied to a waveguide changes the refractive index of the waveguide. The two electrical signals are chosen to introduce a fixed relative phase shift or time delay between the optical signals traveling in the waveguides. The two waveguides are brought together so that the two optical signals are coherently combined and carried along a single waveguide to the output of the pulse generator. When the optical signals are combined, they produce either constructive or destructive interference, so that the combined optical signal is intensity modulated. If the refractive indices of the waveguides are properly controlled with the DC bias voltage, the intensity modulation causes the optical signal to manifest itself as a stream of pulses. Because the input electrical signals are simply sine waves, the pulses by themselves do not carry any data, and another modulator may be used to encode data on the pulse stream.
One particularly useful feature of the pulse generator embodying the present invention is its use of electrical signals chosen to introduce a predetermined frequency shift on each optical pulse generated by the pulse generator. This frequency shift is achieved by introducing a predetermined timing difference between the two input electrical signals. Each electrical signal affects the phase of the optical signal traveling down the parallel waveguide to which the electrical signal is applied. The phase shifts generated by the electrical signals affect the phase or frequency of the pulses that result when the light beams traveling in the two arms meet and interfere.
Proper selection of the electrical signals, and of the timing skew between the electrical signals, is important to produce desired frequency shifts for the pulses. Because of the frequency shift, the pulses exhibit a progressive phase shift when viewed with the center frequency of the pulses as the new reference frequency. Various progressive phase shifts are possible, but of particular interest is a progressive
phase shift. That is, the phase shift between adjacent pulses may successively be
and so on. It will be recognized that such a progressive phase shift can be simplified to a repeating cycle of
and π. Pulses exhibiting such a phase shift can be modulated using differential phase shift keying to produce
modulation. Alternatively, the pulses may be modulated using on-off keying to produce the equivalent of a vestigial sideband OOK signal.
A more complete understanding of the present invention, as well as further features and advantages of the invention, will be apparent from the following Detailed Description and the accompanying drawings.
transmitter according to an aspect of the present invention;
The present invention will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which several presently preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in various forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
is typically approximately 193 terahertz (THz) for optical fiber communication, and the corresponding wavelength is approximately 1550 nm. If the optical source 106 is a CW laser as described above, the field of the light signal from the laser can be described as
E0=Aexp(−iωt)+c.c., (1)
where A is the amplitude of the monochromatic wave, ω is the angular frequency, and c.c. stands for complex conjugate.
The input waveguide 102 divides into first and second parallel waveguides 108 and 110, respectively. The parallel waveguides 108 and 110 then combine into an output waveguide 112 that produces an optical output 114. The optical output 114 is the output of the pulse generator 100.
The pulse generator 100 includes at least one low speed phase shifter 116 and preferably a second low speed phase shifter 118, as well as two high speed phase shifters 120 and 122. The low speed phase shifters 116 and 118 are suitably controlled by electrical signal sources 124 and 126, respectively. The electrical signal sources 124 and 126 suitably provide input voltages chosen to create a desired phase difference between the optical signals traveling in the waveguides 108 and 110. The phase shift provided by the first low speed phase shifter 116 is referred to herein as δφ1 and the phase shift provided by the second low speed phase shifter 118 is referred to as δφ2. Considerations relating to the choice of values of δφ1 and δφ2 will be described below.
The high speed phase shifters 120 and 122 are controlled by electrical signal sources 128 and 130, respectively. The electrical signal sources 128 and 130 suitably produce signals in the form of sine waves, with a frequency chosen according to the desired pulse periods. In one presently preferred embodiment, the signal source 128 supplies a signal proportional to
and the signal source 130 supplies a signal proportional to
The value of Ω is based on the desired pulse period and follows the relationship
where T is the pulse period. For example, if the pulse repetition rate is 40 GHz, the pulse period T=25 picoseconds. The value τ represents a relative time skew between the two input electrical signals. A time skew τ=0 corresponds to the push-pull differential drive configuration of the MZM 100.
In the following mathematical description, the modulation depth, or the peak-to-peak phase shift induced by each of the high speed phase shifters 128 and 130, is referred to as Δφp−p. The field of the optical signal traveling through the waveguide 108 is described as follows:
where A, ω Δφp−p, Ω, τ, δφ1 are all described above.
By adjusting Δφp−p and δφ1 such that
where N is an arbitrary integer, the expression of E1 can be rewritten as:
Similarly, the electrical field of the signal in the other waveguide 110 can be given as follows:
and the use of
for the bias control of the waveguide 110 yields
The field produced by the signal in the output waveguide 112 can be obtained by coherently combining E1 and E2 to generate the output field
In equation (8), the cosine function represents the magnitude of the output signal, which is a pulse train with a pulse period of
and a duty cycle of 50%.
The exponential function in equation (8) reveals the phase of the optical signal, which is as follows:
If a new frequency reference is chosen as follows:
equation (8) above can be rewritten in the following form:
where the phase φ′(t) with respect to the new frequency reference is
One kind of PPS pulse generator that is particularly useful is one producing pulses having a phase increment of
This desired phase increment can be achieved if the frequency shift
In that case, every pair of adjacent pulses will appear to have a phase shift of
The timing skew required to achieve this progressive phase shift can be calculated from equation (10). Using
yields the value
Therefore, the timing skew τ is given by
Furthermore, a suitable phase modulation depth
can be calculated using equation (3). These parameters have been used to produce the curves 202, 210, and 220 of
The concepts presented in the above described embodiment of the invention can be extended to develop alternative embodiments of the invention.
on its input signal, suitably under the control of a bias control source 310. Such a configuration, with the modulation depth and time delay described above, produces a series of progressively phase shifted pulses similar to those produced by the pulse generator 100 of
A further alternative aspect of the invention involves the use of a chirp free pulse generator followed by a phase modulator.
The output of the chirp free pulse generator 402 is then supplied to a phase modulator 308, controlled by a phase modulation signal source 410. The phase modulator 408 induces a phase modulation on a stream of optical pulses. The optical pulses may suitably have characteristics similar to those illustrated in
If desired, a smaller duty cycle may be used to reduce the effect of chirp. This chirp is caused by the non-ideal phase of the pulse train produced by the modulator 408. The non-ideal phase can be seen by contrasting the phase curve 220 in
A
pulse generator such as the pulse generator 100 may advantageously be employed in series with a modulator such as a differential phase shift keying (DPSK) modulator or an on-off keying (OOK) modulator. The stream of pulses produced by the pulse generator serves as an optical input to the data modulator. The modulator then modulates the optical signal in either its phase or its amplitude using an electrical data signal. Depending on the particular choices made for the operation of the pulse generator and the particular modulator used, a number of particularly useful encoding techniques are possible.
The transmitter 500 is suitably supplied by a CW laser 503. The transmitter 500 includes a modulator 504, suitably implemented as a Mach-Zehnder modulator. The modulator 504 is suitably driven by a data signal source 506, which supplies the modulator 504 with electrical signals encoding data using DPSK, such that the modulator 504 encodes a bit as a phase shift between adjacent pulses of 0 or π, depending on the identity of the bit. That is, the modulator 504 may encode a “0” as a pulse with the same phase as the previous pulse, and may encode a “1” as a pulse with a π phase shift with respect to the previous pulse.
The modulator 504 adds a phase shift of 0 or π to the signal it receives. If the input to the modulator 504 has a constant phase, the output of the modulator 504 will be pulses having a phase shift of 0 or π between pulses. However, in the arrangement illustrated in
between pulses, produced by the pulse generator 502. The modulator 504 imposes a phase shift of 0 or π on this pulse stream, resulting in an optical signal wherein data is represented by phase shifts of
for “0” and “1”, respectively. Such a modulation technique is referred to as π/2-DPSK.
The data transmission accomplished by a transmitter such as the transmitter 500 of
The electrical driver signal that controls the DPSK data modulator is differentially encoded from the original data to be transmitted, as can be seen in the example in the table above. This driver signal directly controls the phase imposed by the DPSK data modulator 504. The addition of the phase imposed by the DPSK modulator 504 and the phase from the π/2-PPS pulse generator 502 yields the last row in the table, which shows the values for the phase of the π/2-DPSK signal that forms the output of the transmitter 500.
Applying the on-off keying of the modulator 604 to the progressively phase shifted pulses produced by the pulse generator 602 generates a signal that is equivalent to a VSB signal. A VSB signal includes asymmetric carrier tones in the optical power spectrum, and it is known to be robust against strong optical filtering. Prior art of VSB makes use of optical filters that are intentionally detuned from the laser frequency to filter the optical signal. The use of the on-off keying modulator 604 with the π/2 progressively phase shifted pulses achieves the filtering effect electronically.
The modulation process accomplished by a transmitter such as the transmitter 600 can be better understood by considering the modulation of an exemplary data stream 01110100. The successive values of the data stream 0111010 and the various pulse streams used to modulate the data stream are laid out in the following table. The intensity of the data-encoded optical signal is controlled by the data modulator 604, while the phase of the pulses is determined by the π/2-PPS pulse generator 602. The amplitude and phase of the output signal are represented in the complex form with “i” representing an imaginary number {square root}{square root over (−1)}.
An experiment was carried out to test a VSB similar to the transmitter 600 of
At step 806, the pulses produced by the pulse generator are suitably modulated with electrical signals representing binary data to be transmitted. The electrical signals may suitably represent the data in the form of differential phase shift keying, in which case the modulation of pulses having a progressive phase shift of
produces
DPSK pulses. Such pulses represent binary data by a phase shift between adjacent pulses of no more than
Alternatively, the electrical signals may be applied so as to perform on-off keying modulation on the progressively phase shifted pulses, in order to produce a data output exhibiting vestigial sideband modulation.
on its input signal, where T is the desired pulse period and τ is computed as described above, based on the value of T and the frequency of the optical signal source.
At step 1102, an optical signal is controlled by an electrical input signal to generate chirp free pulses. The optical signal is preferably produced by a continuous wave laser and the electrical input signal produces a stream of chirp free pulses, with the pulses preferably having a duty cycle of approximately 33%. Modulation of the optical signal may suitably be accomplished by supplying the optical signal to a Mach-Zehnder modulator differentially driven with a sinusoidal driver signal having a frequency equal to one half the pulse rate.
At step 1104, the stream of chirp free pulses is then phase modulated. The phase modulation is suitably chosen to produce a pulse train having a duty cycle of approximately 33% and exhibiting a progressive phase shift of approximately
While the present invention has been disclosed in the context of various aspects of presently preferred embodiments, it will be recognized that the invention may be suitably applied to other environments consistent with the claims which follow.