The invention relates generally to optical signal transmission and is particularly, but not exclusively, suited for systems where phase information is transmitted over an optical cable to a remotely located optical receiver where the optical cable is subject to vibration due to the external environment.
Optical cable (fiber) is utilized in a variety of applications to carry information that is modulated onto a beam of light. In some applications significant portions of the optical cable are in an environment where the optical cable is not normally subjected to substantial physical vibration. In other applications optical cable is utilized to carry information between two locations where the optical cable is subject to substantial movement, flexing or vibration.
Movement of an optical cable carrying information encoded on a light beam can give rise to a change in the state of polarization of the transmitted light. Unwanted changes in the state of polarization of the transmitted light such as due to tow cable strum are manifest as polarization noise at the optical receiver.
Polarization diversity detection has been utilized in an optical receiver to overcome polarization fading. The desired signal can disappear at the optical receiver due to polarization fading such as when the two light beams in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer are orthogonal. A polarization diversity receiver is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,852,507, which is incorporated herein by reference. Polarization optics or masks have been employed at the receiver adjacent to the detector elements to achieve polarization diversity reception.
However, rapidly changing states of polarization of the transmitted light, such as due to tow cable strum, can create sufficient polarization noise at the receiver to substantially impair the detection of the transmitted optical signal. Polarization masks or shifters used at the receiver prior to signal detection are useful in helping to eliminate signal fading due to polarization crossing but also induce unwanted polarization noise at the receiver when the light beam carrying the signal is subjected to undesired changes of polarization state. Thus, there exists a need for an improved optical system that can take advantage of polarization diversity while minimizing difficulties with polarization noise.
It is an object of the invention to provide a solution that substantially satisfies this need.
The invention in one implementation encompasses an apparatus. The apparatus includes at least one polarization beamsplitter that receives as an input a single light beam carrying sensor information and produces two light beams with polarization diversity. These two beams each carry sensor information contained in the single originating light beam. This apparatus is located at or near the point of origination of information that is to be conveyed to a remotely located optical receiver. Separate optic fibers carry each of the two beams to the remote location where the information is recovered by an optical receiver from the two separate light beams.
In a further implementation, the apparatus includes means for producing three separate light beams from a single light beam where each of the three beams is polarization diverse from the other beams. Three separate optic fibers carry respectively each of the three beams from the point of origination to the remote location where the information is recovered by an optical receiver from the three separate light beams.
Another implementation of the invention encompasses an exemplary method. The method includes generating, at or adjacent the point of origination of information to be conveyed to a remotely located optical receiver, at least two light beams that are polarization diverse to each other that each carries a representation of the same information. These two light beams may be converted into two single mode type light beams. Separate optic fibers transmit the single mode light beams to the remote location where an optical receiver selects one of the light beams for decoding the signal information.
Features of exemplary implementations of the invention will become apparent from the description, the claims, and the accompanying drawings in which:
An aspect of the present invention resides in the recognition of the mechanism by which polarization noise occurs and in appreciating an energy transfer characteristic of a light beam carried by an optical fiber as a function of polarization changes. Although polarization diversity detection has been employed within known optic receivers, polarization noise caused by vibration of the optic fiber has provided an adverse impact in being able to accurately decode the transmitted signal. In considering this problem, an inventive contribution was made when the total transmitted power of the light beam was considered from a different perspective. In traveling from the sensor output to the detector at the optical receiver, the time-dependent characteristic of the total transmitted power of the light beam should remain the same except for the overall attenuation loss. This principle applies even in the presence of undesired polarization changes due to cable vibration. Thus, a single light detector, e.g. a photodiode, at the optical receiver which collects all of the light from a single cable should reflect the time-dependent power characteristic of the light beam with or without undesired polarization changes. Therefore, generating polarization diverse signals at or adjacent the signal source and transmitting the polarization diverse light beams on separate optic fibers, even if these fibers are subjected to vibrations causing undesired polarization changes, can be decoded by separate detectors at the optical receiver with minimized interference due to polarization noise.
The sensor 42 which may comprise an acoustic sensor, e.g. a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, provides an output signal as a light beam carried by a single mode fiber 44. A splice 46 converts the light beam from a single mode fiber type (SMF) to a polarization maintained fiber type (PMF). The output light beam from splice 46 is carried by PMF 48 to a polarization maintaining beam splitter 50, which may comprise a fiber optic implementation available from Canadian Instrumentation and Research, that splits the incoming beam into two beams. One output beam from splitter 50 is carried by PMF 52 to splice 54 that converts the light beam from PMF type to SMF type. The other output beam from splitter 50 is passed by PMF 56 to a 45° PMF to PMF splice 58, which provides a 45° rotation of the polarization eignmstates. This beam is carried by PMF 60 to polarization maintaining beam splitter 62, which may comprise a fiber optic implementation available from Canadian Instrumentation and Research that splits the incoming beam into two PMF beams. One output beam from splitter 62 is carried by PMF 64 to the PMF to SMF splice 66. The other output beam from splitter 62 is carried by PMF 68 to PMF to SMF splice 70. Splices 54, 66 and 70 provide output light beams of a single mode type suited for being economically carried by separate SMFs 34, 36 and 38, respectively. Although a conversion is shown from PMF to SMF at these three splices, PMF fiber could be used to carry the light beams to the optical receiver. These three SMFs each carry a representation of the same instance (same time frame) of an output signal from sensor 42 and traverse region 40 which subjects the fibers to vibration. The light beams carried by these three fibers are terminated respectively at optical receiver 32 containing three separate photodiode detectors coupled respectively to each SMF.
For this embodiment, the PM fibers 56 and 60 along with a 45° PMF to PMF splice 58 are needed between splitter 50 and 62. It is not necessary to use PMF for fibers 52, 64 and 68 assuming that PMF fibers are not needed in order for the associated splitters 50 and 62 to work as described.
The following values and parameters can be utilized in the exemplary embodiment as shown in
A detailed analysis of the signals generated by origination system 30 follows and concludes with equations that describe the useful beat signals presented to the optical receiver for each fiber. This example assumes that the sensor 42 is a Mach-Zehnder interferometer having a basic structure such as described in FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 5,448,058. As shown in
Two elliptically polarized fields representing light from the two legs of a fiber optic sensor, e.g. a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, are incident on beamsplitter 50. In their principal axis coordinate systems, they are:
Angles α and β range from −45° to +45°. The tangent of the angle gives the ratio of the minor to major axis. The absolute values of α and β are 45° for right and left circularly polarized light and zero for linearly polarized light.
The following rotation matrices are used to express the fields in a common coordinate system along the fast and slow axes of the PM fiber.
Rotation angles are x for field A and y for field B. They range from zero to 180°. The fields in the new coordinate system are:
A(x)=Rot(x)·A B(y)=Rot(y)·B (Eq. 3)
At beamsplitter 50, the power reflection and transmission coefficients for fast and slow axes are:
Rf=0 Tf=1.00 Rs=0.667 Ts=0.333 (Eq. 4)
Reflection and transmission matrices of field amplitudes A and B at beamsplitter 50 are given by equations 5-1 and 5-2:
Arbitrary phase factors θ0, θ1, θ2 and θ3 represent propagation of the light down the fast and slow axes of the PM fibers after the beam splitting operations.
After beamsplitter 50, the 45° rotation at the 45° PMF to PMF splice 58 is represented by a 45° rotation matrix (Rot45) and the beam separation of beamsplitter 62 is given by two polarization matrices (P2 in the x axis and P3 in the y axis) in the 45° angle rotated coordinate system as:
Transmission matrices of equation 7 represent the propagation of light from the input of beamsplitter 50 to the two outputs of beamsplitter 62. They are products of the matrices in equations 5 and 6.
T2=P2*Rot45*T1 T3=P3*Rot45*T1 (Eq. 7)
Propagation matrices R1, T2 and T3 characterized light propagation from the input of beamsplitter 50 to the output fibers 34, 38 and 36, respectively. The transformed fields A and B at fibers 34, 38 and 36 are given by equations 8-1 and 8-2:
A1(x)=R1*A(x) A2(x)=T2*A(x) A3(x)=T3*A(x) (Eq. 8-1)
B1(y)=R1*B(y) B2(y)=T2*B(y) B3(y)=T3*B(y) (Eq. 8-2)
The useful beat signals presented to the optical receiver are products of fields A and B at fibers 34, 38 and 36, respectively. The respective magnitudes are:
H1(x,y)=|A1(x)*{overscore (B1(y))}| H2(x,y)=|A2(x)*{overscore (B2(y))}| H3(x,y)=|A3(x)*{overscore (B3(y))}| (Eq. 9)
The bar above portions of factors in equation 9 represents the complex conjugate of the factor. In practice, the maximum beat signal among the three signals presented by fibers 34, 38 and 36 is used for signal recovery by the polarization diversity receiver.
Using the above equations, an empirical study was made to identify the worst case (minimum magnitude) for the maximum available signal. Rotation angles of x and y from zero to 180° for the input fields of A and B were considered. Elliptical polarization angles α and β as well as arbitrary phase factors θ0, θ1, θ2 and θ3 were utilized as adjustable parameters. By varying angles α, β, x and y in a systematic way as well as by varying phase factors θ0, θ1, θ2 and θ3 the lowest possible maximum beat signal was obtained. The results of the study found a minimum of the maximum beat signal of 0.25 and a maximum beat signal of 0.667. These values are based on a reference of 1.0 representing the maximum beat signal obtained by a single photodiode at the optical receiver without any polarization masks.
For the embodiment of the present invention as shown in
Various modifications and additions can be made to the illustrative embodiments. For example, more than three light beams carried by more than three optic fibers could be used. Although polarization noise is minimized by using polarization diverse signals carried by separate fibers in the illustrative embodiments between the entirely of the path from origination to optical receiver, only using this technique in the region of vibration is required. Thus, it is not necessary that separate fibers with separate polarization diverse light beams be used for the whole path. For example, the polarization diverse signals could be generated just prior to entry into the region of vibration, as opposed to being generated at or adjacent the origination signal source. Various types of optic and fiber devices can be used to produce polarization diverse light beams.
The steps or operations described herein are just exemplary. There may be many variations to these steps or operations without departing from the spirit of the invention. For instance, the steps may be performed in a differing order, or steps may be added, deleted, or modified.
Although exemplary implementations of the invention have been depicted and described in detail herein, it will be apparent to those skilled in the relevant art that various modifications, additions, substitutions, and the like can be made without departing from the spirit of the invention and these are therefore considered to be within the scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.