This application is related to the disclosure of U.S. Pat. No. 6,760,512 by David M. Pepper, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This application is also related to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 filed Feb. 4, 2008, entitled “Two-dimensional Optical True Time Delay Method” and to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,643 also filed Feb. 4, 2008, entitled “Digitally Controlled Optical Tapped Time Delay Modules and Arrays”, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Optical beam control is often required where information from an optical beam must be relayed from one location to another. High-bandwidth, secure laser communication (e.g. pulse-burst encoding, pulse position modulation, etc.), infrared countermeasures (IRCM), target designation, bio/chem beam steering and laser radar are a few of the applications in which optical beam control is required. Optical beam control of pulsed optical beams requires that the control device provide time-coincident generation of the desired pulse format across the entire aperture of the control device.
Devices for steering optical beams are well known in the art. Optical beam steering can be implemented with electro-mechanical systems. Such systems generally consist of a mirror mounted on an electrical actuator. These systems provide relatively low losses for the strength of the reflected beam. However, such electro-mechanical systems are limited to low response frequencies up to the order of 1 KHz. The moving parts of an electro-mechanical system along with size and weight factors are considered to be major limitations of such a system.
Smaller and lighter optical beam steerers are provided by compact arrays of non-mechanical beam deflectors, such as optical MEMS mirrors (O-MEMS) or liquid crystal arrays. The optical signal provided to these devices is generally split into multiple optical signals. The arrays then actually consist of multiple optical radiators which act to steer and radiate multiple optical signals in a desired direction. However, since the radiators are generally deployed in a relatively flat plane, the output beams do not arrive at a receive point at the same time. This problem is particularly seen when the optical signal comprises pulsed signals. In this case, the optical pulse received from the radiating element furthest from the receive point will lag the pulse received from the closest radiating element. This problem is further exacerbated when the pulse widths (or the time slots for encoding) are shorter than the photon transit time across the radiating aperture. Performance of the optical transmitting system is improved when the individual optical beams are made time-coincident to create a time-coincident optical beam.
Applying a time delay to each optical beam before it is radiated provides the capability to generate a time-coincident optical beam. Controlling the delay of signals from individual transmitting elements is actually the principle behind a beam-steered phased array antenna system. Phased array antenna systems employ a plurality of individual antenna elements that are separately excited to cumulatively produce a transmitted electromagnetic wave that is highly directional. In a phased array, the relative phases of the signals provided to the individual elements of the array are controlled to produce an equiphase beam front in the desired pointing direction of the antenna beam. The premise of a true-time delay beam-steered phased array is to steer the array beam by introducing known time delays into the signals transmitted by the individual antenna elements. Accurate beam steering of a pulsed optical beam from individual optical elements similarly requires introducing time delays into the optical signals from individual optical elements to produce an equiphase optical beam front.
Optical control systems for producing selected time delays in signals for phased array antennas are well known in the art. Different types of optical architectures have been proposed to process optical signals to generate selected delays, such as routing the optical signals through optical fiber segments of different lengths; using deformable mirrors to physically change the distance light travels along a reflected path before transmission; and utilizing free space propagation based delay lines, which architecture typically incorporates polarizing beam splitters and prisms. These techniques can also be used for optical beam steering, with various levels of success.
The use of optical fiber segments to introduce delays requires the use of many optical switches and the splicing together of numerous segments of fiber. The costs of construction of such a device are substantial, given the significant amount of design work and precision assembly work required to produce a device having the range and incremental steps of time delays necessary to provide the desired steering. The numerous switching and coupling elements also introduce very high optical losses in the beam-forming circuitry, requiring significant optical power.
The deformable mirror system relies on the physical displacement of a mirror to provide the necessary time delay; an array of moveable mirrors allows the generation of a range of delayed optical signals. This type of system introduces additional complexity into an optical beam steering system due to the tight tolerances and small time delays required for optical signals.
An optical architecture for time delay beam-forming using free space elements is disclosed by Riza in U.S. Pat. No. 5,117,239, “Reversible Time Delay Beamforming Optical Architecture for Phased-Array Antenna,” dated May 26, 1992. In Riza, input optical beams are directed through a plurality of free space delay devices which selectively delay the beams. The delay imparted to an individual beam is selected by a plurality of spatial light modulators coupled with polarizing beam splitters which will either pass a light beam or direct the light beam into a delay device. This architecture also requires a large number of individual delay devices, which increases the complexity and cost of the system.
An optical true-time delay bulk structure is disclosed by Zhenhai Fu and Ray T. Chen in “Five-bit substrate guided wave true-time delay module working up to 2.4 THz with a packing density of 2.5 lines/cm2 for phased array antenna applications,” Optical Engineering, Vol. 37, No. 6, June 1998, pp. 1838-1844. The bulk substrate disclosed by Fu and Chen comprises a passive waveguide that takes as an input an optical pulse and generates a sequence of output pulses with fixed delays. In this prior art, the passive substrate is used to provide delays to an optical signal and a photonic switching network is used to select a given set of taps. Holographic gratings are used to provide the output taps along the delay line. To assure that each tap has the same optical output power, the diffraction efficiency of the gratings is designed to increase along the delay line, as the successive taps couple the light out. Since the waveguide is passive, i.e., no external control is used to modify the delay provided by the waveguide, and, further, the tapped output locations are fixed, the output sequence of optical pulses is fixed in a temporal sense and cannot be changed. The device disclosed by Fu and Chen is directed to optically controlling an RF pulse-forming network with a fixed set of time delays.
Based on the foregoing it was believed to be desirable to provide a mechanism for producing variable true time delay in an optical signal without requiring active switching and without high insertion loss. A one dimensional solution is presented in U.S. Pat. No. 6,760,512 by David M. Pepper, noted above, which is a mechanism that would allow for precision optical beam steering.
The aforementioned and related U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647, filed Feb. 4, 2008, entitled “Two-dimensional Optical True Time Delay Method” relates to the use of a multiplicity of tapped optical delay lines as a means to generate a programmable optical true-time delay (TTD) network over a two dimensional (2-D) array for a planar beam-steering aperture using only two independent control signals. The set of tapped outputs provides a corresponding set of subapertures through which each output optical pulse emerges, with increasing delayed outputs along each tapped line (assuming an input optical pulse at one end of the line) for a two-dimensional N×M array addressed by two (2) independent TTD controls signals. The term ‘subaperture’ refers to individual pixelated apertures within an overall aperture. Depending on the specific aperture hardware embodiment, the subapertures may be actually pixelated (i.e. discrete individual ‘mini’ apertures) or they may be only connected on a subaperture basis but really are part of one contiguous large monolithic aperture).
The technology disclosed therein provides a means of simple control of a large arbitrary number subapertures configured as a of 2-D set tapped arrays, so that only two independent control parameters are required to result in a set of linear, programmable time delays for all subapertures in the 2-D array. This dramatically reduces the required number of control parameters from N×M controls to only two control parameters.
This application describes a number of specific embodiments for tapped delay lines which may be used in the application described in the aforementioned US Patent Application, but they may be used in other applications as well. The described tapped delay lines are programmable and can be reconfigured rapidly (≈1 msec or less), which is suitable for most laser communication scenarios.
The described delay lines may be used to provide a set of optical delays that drive a planar array (1-D or 2-D) of beam-steering elements. The composite system may be used, for example, for beam steering of high-bandwidth information in an optical communication system, which replaces traditional large mechanically driven gimbal mirrors with compact, planar arrays of optical MEMS, liquid crystal, or other planar non-gimbal beam-steerers. The TTD network is required to assure simultaneous arrival of a set of short optical pulse outputs from an array of sub-apertures to a given target, across a large field of view (≈45°).
This invention is useful in a variety of free-space laser communication systems, flash ladar, range finding, pulsed laser metrology, remote sensing and other high-bandwidth optical systems.
This invention improves on the prior art in programmable optical delay line technology.
Maintaining spatial wavefront coherence across the entire aperture of an optical transmitter is also described herein. Spatial coherence provides for diffraction limited performance across the entire aperture. This enhances the optical intensity that can be received at the receiver end of a communications link.
a and 1b depict an analog embodiment of a tapped time delay module which may be used to embody a 1-D or 2-D beam steerer controlled by one or two control parameters; in this embodiment three channels are shown, with
a and 2b depict another analog embodiment of a tapped time delay module which may be used to embody a 1-D or 2-D beam steerer controlled by one or two control parameters; in this embodiment three channels are shown, with
a and 3b depict an analog embodiment of a tunable micro-resonator device. In this embodiment a single channel is shown, with
a and 8b depict the effect of varying the control voltage applied to the module with fixed delays of
a and 9b depicts utilizing two modules with fixed delays of the type shown in
Three embodiments are discussed below. In each embodiment, two control parameters can control the time delay associated with a 2-D array of linear tapped time delay units as described in our aforementioned and related U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 filed Feb. 4, 2008, entitled “Two-dimensional Optical True Time Delay Method” for a discussion of how to determine the value of the two control parameters Δy and Δx used to control a 2-D array of optical apertures.
A digital embodiment of an optical time delay module which may be used for 2-D beam steering in the manner described in our related US patent application identified above is described in the other related US patent application mentioned above. In the digital embodiment, which we refer to as “a digitized true-time delay module,” a single binary word (1s and 0s) controls an ensemble of identical digitized true-time delays modules. Since only two control parameters are required for two-dimensional beam steering (as previously described above), only two binary words are required. In this case, the amount of time delay (in each dimension) is digitized, since a binary bit stream is used as the control setting.
We disclose herein an “analog true-delay module,” wherein a single (analog) applied voltage level controls an ensemble of identical analog true-time delay modules. Since only two control parameters are required for two-dimensional beam steering, only two analog voltages are required. In this case, the amount of time delay (in each dimension) is continuous, since an analog voltage level is used as the control setting.
In both the digital and analog embodiments, the module can be a photonic chip or photonic crystal, with optical waveguides, diffraction gratings, optical switching networks, and waveguide couplers all being preferably integrated into a single photonic chip or, alternatively, an ensemble of identical photonic chips.
Finally, optical gain can be integrated into the chips via optical pumping of gain regions in either the guiding structure or in the substrate. Waveguide and coupler optical losses can be compensated for, if need be, as well as enhancing the Q of a micro-resonator.
While these embodiments may be particularly useful in connection with the method described in our related US patent application, these embodiments will doubtlessly find use in other applications and indeed we describe still further embodiments which are useful in applications other than the two-dimensional optical beam steering of our related US patent application identified above.
There are myriad applications for this technology. We describe the use of this technology as a means to provide a set of tapped optical delay lines, with application to high-bandwidth optical beam steering for laser communication systems over a free-space propagation path using a true-time delay (TTD) approach with programmability in the US patent application identified above. This is followed by a brief discussion of other potential device and system embodiments using variations on our basic analog embodiments.
Analog True-Time Delay Modules for Beam Steering
One aspect of the analog optical tapped time delay module 23 of
The integrated optical waveguide module 23 is attached (e.g., bonded, flip-chip processed, etc.) to a PZT element 24, forming a chip-scale structure. This module 23 and the waveguide channel 22 may be fabricated using thin-film deposition techniques to deposit a thin film transparent material. For example, a Hydex-based compact optical waveguide structure or photonic crystal structure for defining the waveguide module 23 may be grown onto a PZT (or other smart piezoelectric or piezoelectric-like material) substrate 24. Typically the physical length of the compact delay line 22 is chosen so that for typical PZT-induced stretching (10−4), the total delay for each tap length is consistent with the optical transit time from one beam-steering sub-aperture 10 to its nearest neighbor. As an example, for a 100 μm pitch of a multi-subaperture beam steering element, the required path length will be ≈10−4×100 μm/n, where n is the effective index of the guide (n≈1.5), or about 60 cm of waveguide. Note that PCFs (or, photonic crystal planar waveguides), may be suitable here, where the effective index may be much greater near a photonic band edge (with system bandwidth as a tradeoff, owing to the dispersion), thereby reducing the physical length of the waveguide channel. Optical gain can be incorporated into the structure (e.g. substrate and/or guided medium) to compensate for propagation losses through such relatively long time delay lines.
Depending on the required system parameters (the reconfiguration response time, the maximum drive voltage slew rate, the pitch, the system bandwidth, etc.), a single PZT chip may suffice, or, a cascaded network of identical PZTs may be required, with one or more taps per PZT chip. In any case, only a single control voltage is required for a linear array of tapped TTDs. If used in the y-array of a two dimensional array as taught in the related application identified above, a single control voltage Δy is used to control the y-array and if used in the x-array a single control voltage Δx is used to control the x-array. In either case the control voltage Δy or Δx controls the amount of stretch of the PZT substrate 24, and hence the material in module 23. Conceptually, the analog control module 23 of
A structure fabricated with a large-index guide can be employed to realize a very compact set of delay lines—each tap in the form of spiral or zig-zag guides—each with a planar tap feeding a 1×2 Bragg coupler 18. The Bragg coupler 18 is designed such that one output port of the coupler continues to the next delay channel of the structure. The other output port is the delayed “tap” output that goes to its respective beam steering sub-aperture. There are two possible designs for this output tap. In one design, each output “tap” remains in the plane of the structure, but near the edge of the chip, and is subsequently coupled into a fiber to drive the beam-steering sub-aperture. In another design, the output tap diffracts off the grating and emerges into free space in a direction normal to the plane of the chip (e.g., this can be realized using a “2-k” Bragg grating). In this case, the set of TTD output “ports” emerge normal to the chip and propagate into free space in parallel. This set of parallel, yet delayed, outputs are then directed to the respective set of beam-steering sub-apertures (alternatively, the set of output beams can strike a computer-generated holographic element that diffracts the composite set of TTDs to the respective beam-steering elements).
Now, the entire chip is bonded to a PZT substrate 24 (or, equivalently, the chip can be grown onto the PZT substrate 24, or the PZT/smart-material can be thin-film-deposited onto the waveguide structure, etc.) as shown in
Using this design philosophy, one can fabricate a set of TTD spirals of even longer length (say, 6 meters instead of 60 cm). In this case, one only requires 10−5 PZT-induced length, instead of 10−4, to produce the same 100 μm of effective time delays. This flexibility can enable a lower PZT drive voltage and, concomitantly, a lower slew rate, as well as a more rapid TTD reconfiguration time.
A system tradeoff here is the optical loss in the waveguide 22 (≈1 dB/cm). (Of course, other materials have far less loss; hence, longer lengths can be realized, as well as much higher Qs, leading to greater spectral channel capacity as well as enhanced narrowband filters.) To compensate for this loss, one can provide an optical amplifier 27 downstream of the TTD array, as shown in
Also note that if the PZT-induced stretching is not uniform across the structure, such systematic effects can be engineered into the device by designing the optical waveguide delay lengths to offset for such differentials. Since this can be done at the mask stage, all fabricated devices will have the same “built-in” compensation. Such design issues will maintain the bandwidth of the overall TTD network (via output pulse simultaneity at the receiver).
By extension, another embodiment of the TTD device is to provide the proper set of time delays in a two-dimensional array. It has been shown (by Pepper in U.S. Pat. No. 6,760,512) that one can reduce the number of drive parameters in a linear TTD array from N to 1, by using a set of identical time-delay taps between each output tap of the line. In Pepper, it was shown that, for a two-dimensional TTD system, one can, by extension reduce the required number of total control parameters from N×M to 1×M. In the related application identified above, we demonstrate that one can reduce the total number of control parameters from N×M to only two (2) control parameters (corresponding, for example, to the two digital words for the embodiment of
Using this paradigm, any tapped delay array (even beyond the specific embodiments described herein), where the temporal spacing between taps is preferably the same in each dimension in general, or more specifically, the same in both dimensions, can now be configured with only two (2) control parameters using the optical delay structures disclosed herein, whereby output pulse simultaneity at a given target in free space can be assured in both azimuth and elevation (“az-el”) across the entire field of view with only two control parameters. By extension, the chip-scale devices disclosed herein can be arranged in a two-dimensional structural configuration. This can be accomplished by using a PZT or smart material structure that is anisotropic so that a pair of control voltages can be applied for asymmetric mechanical elongation/compression along the principal axes of the element.
Yet another embodiment is to form a structure that can enable coupling normal to the plane of the structure. See
Another class of applications involves the use of the disclosed structures as compact, low-voltage phase shifters. This basic device is very similar to the TTD-based device of the related application identified above. However, now, the effective time delay corresponds to a distance equivalent to a fraction of an optical wavelength (as opposed to, perhaps, millions of optical wavelengths in the TTD invention of the related U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 identified above).
In this case, either a much shorter “delay line” is needed, or, equivalently, a much smaller voltage need be applied to a tightly wound long-length spiral structure. Applications of this device include continuously tunable optical phase-shifters for coherent communications (e.g., quadrature control of homodyne receivers), tunable filters and DWDM networks, compact optical modulators, adaptive optical wavefront-correction systems, etc. The main benefit of such applications is that a much lower voltage and slew-rate is required to yield a given optical phase shift relative to the prior art (e.g., PZT-driven mirrors, fiber-wound mandrels, etc.), as well as providing improved compactness and ruggedness. Finally, arrays of optical phase shifters can be easily realized (using a mask set of multiple phase shifters) for applications such as multi-pixel wavefront correctors and for coherent imaging arrays, and high-bandwidth pulse-forming networks.
The two time-delay modes (millions of optical wavelengths and fractions of an optical wavelength) can be combined so that a single device can assure both the temporal coincidence of a set of beam-steered beamlets to a given location, as well as giving rise to a wavefront coherent beam across the total aperture of the TTD module. The wavefront coherence results in a diffraction-limited increase in optical brightness at the target location by a factor of N×M.
Other embodiments of a tapped optical time delay module 23 include a high-Q resonant chip-scale structure, which is called a micro-ring resonator 45. The micro-ring resonator 45 is bonded to a PZT substrate 24, so that it can be employed as a tunable optical filter or tunable optical discriminator for FM demodulation applications; see
Given sufficient gain, the device of
Optical gain, so that the device of
When sufficient optical gain is realized so that the ring resonator device of
A chip-scale PZT-tunable ring laser 45 can be employed in many applications known per se in the prior art. For example, it can be used as an FM modulated source by modulating the PZT substrate 24. PZT-modulated ring lasers are commercially available (e.g., the “Lightwave” diode-pumped narrowband Nd:YAG system), which can be modulated by a PZT-controlled mirror. However, these prior art devices employ discrete components that form the laser resonator, its mirrors and its tunable elements as opposed to a truly monolithic chip-scale structure as described herein. Moreover, the structures disclosed herein can enable much greater modulation rates and excursions (also with similar narrowband operation), since our diode-pumped system employs a thin film PZT to drive a very low-mass monolithic structure (i.e., the chip, which constitutes the entire laser). This follows, since the effective cavity length of this device can be fabricated to be very long (e.g., using spiral loops, similar in concept to the TTD embodiment), so that a given PZT voltage will result in a greater total laser-cavity path-length change (leading to greater tenability, etc). In addition, our chip-scale laser can be much more rugged than is the prior art discrete component laser system and, therefore, can withstand greater G-forces, given its lower mass. Such modulated sources can have application to laser communication systems (subject to the limitations of the PZT bandwidth) and Doppler-compensated systems. Moreover, by controlling the frequency excursion of a chip-scale FM oscillator (e.g., by controlling the magnitude of the voltage applied to the PZT), the device can be utilized for remote sensing via FM modulation spectroscopy, for chem-bio sensing applications, etc. This chip-scale tunable laser can also have application to onboard missile sources, coherent detectors, etc. Other novel chip-scale tunable laser structures can utilize so-called “defect” center photonic crystal lasers, which can controlled by our PZT-based substrate or thin-film (as well as other classes of “smart materials”). Thus, a very-low threshold, tunable chip-scale laser can be realized.
The control of the temporal delays (one control parameter Δx and Δy for each orthogonal coordinate) can be achieved using an analog control module such as that described with reference to
The basic TTD described herein imposes time delays into each subaperture to assure time-coincidence of all optical data streams at a desired location in space. In some applications, one also desires overall wavefront coherence which guarantees that all the subapertures in the system maintain a fixed and well-defined phasefront across the entire ensemble of subapertures. In this case, the performance of the system is greatly enhanced, since the diffraction-limit of the system is determined by the overall dimensions of the composite aperture instead of by a single subaperture. Therefore, the optical brightness at the target location is increased by a factor of N×M for an N×M array of subapertures 10.
The desired optical phase control of the TTD system can be realized by augmenting the basic TTD with an adaptive optical (AO) system. A.O. systems are well known in the astronomical, communication and laser arts. In
A servo-controlled feedback loop 51 includes a Wavefront Error Sensor (WES 50) to determine the optical phase errors across the optical beam and a processor 52 to determine the set of error-control voltage levels (N×M voltage levels) to drive the optical phase shift array 48. In this embodiment, the TTD modules 23 previously described and known optical phase shifters 49 are embodied as two separate modules, 23 and 48.
In this embodiment, the PZT substrate 24 is pixelated into N×M addressable elements 55. Note that the TTD control voltage (relatively large scale control), Vo, is common to all (N×M) elements (or subapertures 10), consistent with the basic embodiment discussed herein, with respect to
The control of the phase shifting of the array (for adaptive optical wavefront control) and the control of the time delay of the array for true-time delay beam steering (for high-bandwidth communication) can be achieved simultaneously. Conventional closed-loop or open-loop adaptive optical system architectures (e.g., via wavefront error sensor servo-control) can be used for wavefront control using the same module as that used for TTD control. The voltage level required for wavefront control is typically 10,000 times less than that required for true-time delay control in the case of a 1 cm overall aperture system. Thus the wavefront-control phase shifts will have a negligible effect on the performance of the TTD aspect of the device.
Given a structure with internal optical amplification (via doping of the guided-wave and/or substrate regions), a much longer waveguide can be realized, since propagation losses can be overcome. This can result in a very efficient optical phase shifter, since a relatively low applied voltage can vary the optical phase shift. Hence, a very low-voltage phase shifter can be realized that can provide phase shifts at low-voltage levels (say, TTL levels or about 5 volts) as opposed to existing PZT phase shifters that require 100s to 1000s of volts to realize similar phase shifts. This reduction in the required control voltage for phase control can result in an adaptive optical system with much greater response time and much less electrical drive power.
The planar (tightly confined) waveguide structure can be formed into a ring resonator, for use as tunable filters and optical storage, as well as slow-light propagation for optical data processing as shown in
Another possible embodiment of our invention would be its use as a “programmable slow-light structure,” with application to photonic processors, cache optical memories, and optical computers. Since one class of slow-optical devices involves linear optical interactions in waveguides and resonators (e.g., ring structures), embodiments of our invention can potentially lead to a chip-scale slow-light module with tunability and controllability.
In this embodiment, the guided beam along each y-tapped delay line in the 2-D ensemble encounters a set of grating output couplers 18, each with a progressively increasing fractional output ratio, and a corresponding decreasing fractional transmitted ratio as the latter beam continues to propagate along the remainder of the given y-tapped delay line. That is, the set of gratings along a given y-tapped delay line 23 may be configured such that the diffraction efficiency of the gratings 18 increases from the input end of the line of gratings to the terminus end. The stream of incident optical pulses from the x-tapped delay line is coupled to a TTD region of the wave-guiding structure associated with a line of output gratings. The gratings 18 are configured so that all out-coupled beams 28 emerge normal to the planar structure, in a vertical direction, with the optical power approximately identical for each of the N×M outputs.
Optional fixed delay elements (labeled as 12FXO and 20FO in FIG. 5 of the related US Patent Application) are not shown in
In
Use of Fixed and Variable Delays in the Disclosed Structures
Note that, in general, a set of fixed delays and a set of adjustable delays is always required for a tapped TTD system as disclosed herein and as disclosed in the related U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 mentioned above. And, in addition, the delay module must also provide a capability to incorporate set of different temporal delays across the module to account for the propagation time through the module itself. This follows, given the need to generate an effective “negative” delay to the tap nearest to the input data stream, and, decreasing along the subsequent taps. See the Appendix below for a discussion of these requirements in more detail.
All the embodiments therefore accomplish the same desired result. They differ in how and where the two sets of delays (fixed and variable) are built into the system, and, how and where the set of fixed offset delays are incorporated into the device.
Incorporating Fixed Delays into the Variable Delay Structures
In essence, the embodiment that follows incorporates the required fixed delays into the variable delay module itself. As we show below, this embodiment requires a set of delays, each of which has a different overall delay, which can also be controlled. This is opposed to the embodiment disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 mentioned above, wherein the same adjustable delay is replicated into each successive tap location along the delay structure with the overall accumulated delay increasing at each successive output tap. Since the variable delays are identical, the embodiment disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 mentioned above also requires a stand-alone matrix of different fixed delays. Again, both embodiments (the embodiment disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647 mentioned above and that described below) perform the same overall function, but the new approach in essence, incorporates everything into one delay structure.
Without loss of generality, let us assume a single, one-dimensional tapped delay-line. Hence, we confine ourselves to a FOV coverage on a single 2-D plane (azimuth). The extension to a 3-D system—where one can also propagate out of the plane, i.e. upwards (elevation), easily follows.
Given this introduction, let us now proceed: Instead of setting up the device to always add successively more delay to each tapped output relative to the first tapped exit, one can build a delay line with no adjustable delay between the taps (other than the time it takes the light to travel straight through the structure). In this new case, therefore, as the light exits the given tap, it enters an adjustable, yet, different temporal tap which is dedicated only to that tap. In this way, one can make this independent adjustable delay to have the correct delay to enable the light exiting the first tap to be always greater in delay relative to each subsequent tap. So, in the case of a delay line with four taps, the first tap would direct the light into variable delay that is four times greater the delay line attached to the last tap. This can be done by making the first delay line longer than the second, and, so on. Another way to picture all this is to imagine that the fixed delay offset is now adjustable. That is, take out the existing “variable delay structure” (with successively increasing controllable delays along the delay lines—conceptually similar to the structure shown in
Referring to
In this embodiment, there are four output taps 32, which, in
Each output tap 32 then enters a variable “multi-delay-line” module 23″. See FIG. 7—the upper element 23″ has multiple optical spirals connoting intentional delays (the right most delay line 34 has zero spirals). Each input tap of module 23″ has its own, independent delay line 34. A set of outputs 36 exits and enters a set of (optional) optical amplifiers 27. The left-hand-most delay in this module is equal to 3T, and, each subsequent delay line diminishes in its delay, ranging from 2T, 1T, to 0T. The 0T delay line preferably has a little delay as reasonably possible (ideally it would have zero delay, but that just is not physically possible).
The value of T is chosen so that the delay of the left hand delay line (3T in this embodiment) is equal for the time it takes light to propagate across the input (passive), tapped line 30, from the left-hand-most side to the right-hand-most side. Hence, without any control voltage (i.e., V=0), the left-hand-most output is delayed so that, when the right-hand-most signal exits the module, the signals will all exit the module at the same time. This condition corresponds to a situation where one desires to direct all these beams upward as well as downward, which we refer to as 90° and 270°, respectively, as shown in
Now, referring to
We choose the maximum voltage dependent change in delay, ΔT(Vmax), to equal T (i.e., at Vmax, ΔT=T). Therefore, at Vmax, the total delay of the FIRST delay line (on the left hand side of the module 23″ in
c shows the same TTD module, flipped by 180° about a vertical axis in the plane of the figure. This orientation therefore provides for pulse coincidence ranging from upwards or downwards (90°, 270°) at V=0 to propagation to the right) (180°) at V=Vmax. This pair of modules shown in
Hence, since the range of output angles where simultaneity of the multiple beams can be achieved for a single TTD module is equivalent to two quadrants within a 2-dimensional planar field-of-view.
The outputs 56 from the two modules 23″ are applied to a optical combiner (or switch) 57 as shown in
If a set of optical amplifiers, such as amplifiers 27 shown in
In principle, one can simultaneously direct TTD beams into multiple direction by duplicating the basic structure of
Bottom line: The tradeoff is, in the embodiment of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/025,647, a set of equal delays between the taps is varied, so that the delays accumulate along the delay structure. In this new embodiment of
In general, an effective “negative” time delay is needed to enable a TTD to provide the necessary time delays for a beam-steered direction greater than 0 degrees. That is, the light exiting the first “tap” after entering the input end of the tapped TTD must be delayed relative to light reaching any subsequent taps to provide the required delays. As an example, imagine that one desires to direct the output light normal to the structure (which would be the extreme angle in the first quadrant). This means that the light exiting the first tap needs to be “sequestered” long enough for the light to reach the other end of the delay line. This will assure one that all the light will emerge normal to the line at the same time. Using this reasoning, one sees that the first tap will ALWAYS need to have more delay than the other subsequent taps, since it needs to “wait” until the light reaches the any of the other taps, exits the TTD, and is then directed to reflect into any angle greater than zero degrees. Since the device, as designed, always ADDS more delay as the beam travels down the structure, the only way to “hold” the first light is to find a way to delay the first light relative to the other taps.
Having described this invention in connection with several embodiments and applications of same, further embodiments and/or applications will doubtlessly suggest themselves to those skilled in the art. As such the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments or to the disclosed applications for using same unless specifically required by the appended claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4088969 | Crowley et al. | May 1978 | A |
4736463 | Chavez | Apr 1988 | A |
4813766 | Keene et al. | Mar 1989 | A |
4939527 | Lamberty et al. | Jul 1990 | A |
5051754 | Newberg | Sep 1991 | A |
5061048 | Hayden et al. | Oct 1991 | A |
5103495 | Goutzoulis | Apr 1992 | A |
5117239 | Riza | May 1992 | A |
5202776 | Gesell et al. | Apr 1993 | A |
5272484 | Labaar | Dec 1993 | A |
5455878 | Thaniyavarn | Oct 1995 | A |
5461687 | Brock | Oct 1995 | A |
5512907 | Riza | Apr 1996 | A |
5526170 | Esman et al. | Jun 1996 | A |
5543805 | Thaniyavarn | Aug 1996 | A |
5583516 | Lembo | Dec 1996 | A |
5623360 | Gesell et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
5641954 | Keefer et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
5694134 | Barnes | Dec 1997 | A |
6128421 | Roberts | Oct 2000 | A |
6144786 | Chethik | Nov 2000 | A |
6157475 | Dugan et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6310831 | Dillman | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6351587 | Holland | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6356677 | Hall et al. | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6393177 | Paek | May 2002 | B2 |
6674930 | Hall et al. | Jan 2004 | B2 |
6760512 | Pepper | Jul 2004 | B2 |
6891987 | Ionov et al. | May 2005 | B2 |
7283708 | Efimov | Oct 2007 | B2 |
20020054726 | Fondeur et al. | May 2002 | A1 |
20020181874 | Tulchinsky et al. | Dec 2002 | A1 |
20030002773 | Parker et al. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0043828 | Jul 2000 | WO |