This application relates to an apparatus and method of optical filtering to produce filtered electrical signals.
Photonically-realized microwave filters are known. Compared to purely electronic implementations, photonic microwave filters have wider operating bandwidth, better reconfigurability, and immunity to electromagnetic interference. A high frequency electrical signal is used to drive an electro-optic modulator, which imposes the electrical signal onto an optical carrier wave. The resulting optical signal is manipulated by photonic techniques and then directed to an optical-to-electrical converter to return to the electrical domain. Both finite impulse response (FIR) and infinite impulse response filters (IIR) may be constructed using this methodology.
Previous approaches to the optical signal processing employ a tapped delay-line architecture, resulting in a discrete-time filter. Individual taps are implemented with technologies such as fiber delay lines and fiber Bragg gratings. The photonic processing works in an incoherent regime, where the differences in the tap time delays exceed the laser coherence time; as such, optical powers, rather than vector fields, add. This approach mitigates vulnerability to environmental fluctuations but severely restricts realizable filter functions due to intrinsic positive coefficients for the delay taps. In particular, only low-pass filters are possible, filter flatness cannot be optimized, sidelobes are often high, and general phase functions cannot be realized. In many designs, multiple lasers at different wavelengths are required in order to achieve incoherence. Operation in the incoherent optical regime usually restricts the filter free-spectral-range (FSR) to several GHz or below. Filters that operate in the optical incoherent regime but realize negative tap coefficients via differential electrical detection have been reported. However, these solutions retain other general disadvantages of the tapped delay line approach, including limited reconfigurability and high complexity
A wideband filter is described, including an electro-optical modulator configured to accept light energy from a continuous-wave laser source and a electrical waveform from an electrical modulating signal source. The modulator imposes a representation of the waveform of the electrical signal source onto an optical signal by one or more of, for example, amplitude modulation, phase modulation, or a combination thereof.
The modulator may be configured, for example, to modulate the optical signal to achieve optical double sideband (O-DSB), with partial carrier suppression if desired, and an optical blocking filter may be used to select a single optical sideband (O-SSB). Optical filter technology may be used to manipulate a selected sideband so as to manipulate the optical spectral amplitude, spectral phase, or both. The blocking filter and the optical filter technology may be combined.
The optical filter technology may be an optical pulse shaper based, for example, on virtually-imaged phased array (VIPA) technology, and used for amplitude and phase filtering of the selected optical sideband in the optical frequency domain. Alternatively, other optical filtering technologies may be employed, such as optical filtering based on micro-optical ring resonator arrays that are programmable using thermo-optic effects.
The resulting filtered optical signal may be mixed with a narrowband optical local oscillator (LO) to yield a desired electrical signal when detected by an optical-to electrical (O/E) converter, which may be a high-speed photodetector or photodiode. The optical LO may be generated by passing the laser signal directly through the same optical pulse shaper as the selected optical sideband, by using a portion of the original laser signal obtained prior to the electro-optical modulator, or by using a second, independent, narrowband laser. The achieved electrical filtering function corresponds to a coherent optical filtering and detection function. An optical amplifier may optionally be incorporated in order to reduce overall device insertion loss.
A programmable optical spectral filter may be used, having programmable pulse shaper technology in combination with optical wavelength demultiplexing technology. Direct manipulation of phase and amplitude in the optical domain may result in realization of flexible filtering functions, including high-pass, band-pass, multiple-band-pass, and flat-top filters with narrow skirts and low sidelobes. The optical spectral filter may be programmable and implemented directly in the optical Fourier-transform domain.
Spectral-phase filters using photonically-realized filters may permit, for example, chirp compression and matched filtering of radio frequency signals, and other filter operations with simultaneous and independently programmable control of spectral phase and amplitude. Spectral-phase filters may also permit time delay shifting (typically known as true-time delay) of wide-band and ultra-wide-band radio-frequency signals.
The ability to realize easily reconfigurable spectral filters over a broad band may permit interference excision, both for communications and for radar. Also, notch filters may be formed simultaneously at multiple frequencies to, for example, excise interfering signals, with independent control over both of the individual notches and of the passbands therebetween.
Wideband and ultra-wideband (UWB) signals may be generated for transmission and processing by a receiver. For a fixed transmit energy, the power spectral density scales inversely with bandwidth; consequently, the ability to process extremely broad bandwidths may yield improvements in resistance to jamming and low probability of intercept. Distortions associated with the antenna phase responses, which may result in distortion of the radio frequency signal in the time domain may be compensated by programmable spectral phase filter to optimize receiver signal amplitudes and signal-to-noise ratio.
a) shows a radio transmitter, and
Reference will now be made in detail to several examples. While the claimed invention will be described in conjunction with these examples, it will be understood that it is not intended to limit the claimed invention to such examples. In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in the examples in order to provide a thorough understanding of the subject matter of the claims which, however, may be practiced without some or all of these specific details. In other instances, well known process operations and apparatus have not been described in detail in order not to unnecessarily obscure the description. When a specific feature, structure, or characteristic is described in connection with an example, it will be understood that one skilled in the art may affect such feature, structure, or characteristic in connection with other examples, whether or not explicitly stated herein.
The terms frequency, wavelength, bandwidth and time have well known relationships to each other, and the use of a description in one domain is not intended to particularize the discussion to a specific domain, as will be appreciated by a person of skill in the art.
Waveforms, signals and filter characteristics are described in both the optical and electrical domain. That is, the frequency, phase, and temporal characteristics may be described equivalently in the optical frequency range and the electrical frequency range. Signals in one domain may be converted into signals in the other domain by both known techniques and those described herein. When a signal is described in the electrical domain, the signal may be described as an electrical signal, or by reference to a generic range of electrical frequencies, such as microwave, millimeter wave, and the like. The electrical signal may be associated with signals in electronic equipment, which may have lumped circuit or distributed circuit components, and may have both passive and active components. The electrical signal of the same frequency and characteristics may be radiated as an electromagnetic wave by an antenna, as is known in the fields of telecommunications and radar, for example.
Unless specifically limited to a domain or frequency range, optical and electrical signals may be interchanged and be of any frequency. For example, a microwave network analyzer may actually have an operating frequency range of essentially DC (but usually about 50 MHz) to 20 or 40 GHz, and encompass not only the microwave frequency range, but the very high frequency (VHF) and ultra-high-frequency range (UHF), as well as part of the millimeter wave frequency range.
As shown in
The output of the electro-optical modulator 20 may be applied to an electro-optical (E/O) detector 60, which may be a photodiode, so as to convert the optical intensity into an electrical waveform, which may be measured by a network analyzer 70 or used in an application such as a radar, a telecommunications system, or the like. One or more optical amplifiers 40 which may be Erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFA), semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA), or the like, may be used to adjust the amplitude of the optical signal or compensate for losses in the apparatus.
The output of the modulator 20 may be coupled into the programmable optical filter 2 and filtered optical signal may be coupled out of the programmable optical filter 2 by an optical circulator 210.
For simplicity of presentation, the input microwave signals are often represented as single-frequency tones, and may be generalized to signals having finite bandwidth spectra. A person of skill in the art will recognize that the properties of the device may be characterized using such a single-frequency tone swept in frequency and monitored by, for example, a spectrum analyzer or a network analyzer.
The components are shown substantially co-located but, for example, the electro-optical modulator and the optical filter, and the optical filter and the electro-optical converter, may be separated, and may not be located at the same site. The connection between the various components may be by way of optical fiber, optical waveguides, or by free-space propagation.
The modulator 20 optical output may have a double-sideband format (110a, 110b). Optical filtering may suppress one sideband (e.g., 110a) while passing the carrier 120 and the other sideband (110b), as shown in
When an electrical signal is applied to an arm of the Mach-Zehnder interferometer used as a modulator 20, the output optical field E(t) may be described by
E(t)∝Re{ejω
where Re{ } indicates the real part, ωc is the optical carrier frequency, δ=πVb/Vπ is the phase shift caused by the DC bias Vb, Vπ is the minimum transmission voltage parameter of the modulator, and A cos(Ωt) is the input electrical signal.
The electrical signal is shown as a tone of a constant amplitude and frequency for simplicity in presentation. As will be evident to a person of skill in the art, the input signal may be represented by a Fourier transform of the signal spectrum, or other analytical function, or be band limited noise.
For small signal modulation, equation (1) may be expanded in a Taylor series, the second and higher order terms ignored, and
When an optical filter, such as the programmable optical filter 2 of
where γ(ωc+Ω) represents the frequency-dependent complex amplitude transmission coefficient of the optical filter. In general, the frequency-dependent transmission coefficient of the optical filter may be a complex variable. The filtering may result in modification of the amplitude, the phase, or both, of the optical signal. In an example, the higher frequency (shorter wavelength) sideband may be chosen; however, either one of the two sidebands may be chosen. The carrier may be either suppressed, or not, depending on the application.
The photodiode (PD) current output is
where i(t) is the PD current and I(t) is the optical intensity averaged over the oscillations of the optical carrier. The PD is assumed to be linear with respect to incident optical power and the detector current is proportional to the input light intensity. The current may be converted to a voltage waveform in a trans-impedance amplifier. The voltage signal may consist of a DC component as well as a filtered AC signal. For the AC signal, equation (4) represents an amplitude filter with a spectral response γm(Ω)=γ(ωc+Ω).
According to equation (4), a sufficient condition to have a non-zero signal i(t) is that cos(δ/2) is not equal to zero, and δ=πVb/Vπ is not an odd multiple of π. As such, a non-zero optical carrier intensity is maintained at the modulator output.
A tunable laser with line width of less than about 0.1 pm (˜12.5 MHz) was used as the coherent optical input signal 10. A Mach-Zehnder (MZ) optical-intensity modulator 20 with an electrical −3 dB passband of greater than 30 GHz was used to modulate the microwave signal onto the optical signal. The modulator 20 had a single electrode input and a Vπ of about 5.0 Volts. An input microwave tone was swept from 0.05 GHz to 20.05 GHz (instrumental limit) with a step size of 0.05 GHz and a constant RF power level of −5 dBm, corresponding to a voltage of 0.18 volts for 50Ω impedance (πA/Vπ=0.11). The modulator 20 was biased for double sideband modulation with partial carrier suppression, and the carrier 120 was maintained at approximately the same power level as the modulation sidebands (110a, 110b).
After being amplified by an Erbium-doped fiber amplifier 40 (EDFA) to a total power of about 5 dBm, the signal was passed through the programmable optical filter 2. The optical filter output may be a single sideband signal with or without a carrier, and with an unwanted sideband suppressed by the optical filter 2 by greater than about 25 dB (in this apparatus, for sideband frequencies >˜0.6 GHz displaced from the carrier). A second EDFA 40 was used to amplify the optical power into the fast photodiode 60, which had an electrical −3 dB bandwidth of ˜60 GHz. The electrical signal was recovered by heterodyne detection in the fast PD 60, and the output electrical signal was measured by a network analyzer 70.
In the apparatus of
The optical signal is discussed herein as being dispersed in one spatial dimension by, for example a VIPA or a diffraction grating. A combination of dispersion techniques may be used so as to disperse the optical signals in two substantially orthogonal directions, so that a SLM having a two-dimensional structure, such as is typical of liquid crystal modules, which are typically used in displays, may be used to provide greater resolution in the frequency domain.
The programmable optical filter 2 was used both to suppress one sideband by acting as a blocking filter and to control the amplitude of the other sideband as shown schematically in
a shows the optical power transmission spectrum resulting from turning on pixels N=40 to N=75 of the SLM 240. The result is an optical bandpass filter with about a 25 GHz bandwidth and sharp band edges. The optical carrier wavelength is located at about 1550 nm, corresponding to pixel N=75 of the SLM 240. As the network analyzer used in the measurements had an upper frequency limitation of 20 GHz, only pixels N=45- to N=75, corresponding to about a 20 GHz bandwidth, were used. The contrast ratio (relative attenuation) between the passband and the background is greater than 25 dB, which corresponds to the sideband suppression ratio. The remaining background level may be mainly attributed to non-ideal reflections in the optical filter. The total fiber-to-fiber (input-to-output) insertion loss was about 15 dB (including ˜2 dB circulator loss). Although not shown in the figures, the optical transmission characteristic repeats periodically with period of about 50 GHz (˜0.4 nm).
b-c shows optical power transmission spectra for examples where only a few pixels in the SLM 240 are turned on, and may be used to measure the spectral resolution of the optical filter 2. In
d is an example illustrating the programmability of optical filters. Here the optical filter 2 characteristic consists of multiple flat-topped passbands (3 pixels each) separated by sharp notches (2 pixels each). The channel spacing is non-uniform, which is due to a known nonlinearity in the VIPA 220 spectral dispersion law.
The programmable optical filtering capabilities may be mapped to the electrical domain via homodyne or heterodyne conversion. This may result in a electrical filter functionality that may be measured using the microwave network analyzer 70. A homodyne process is one in which a carrier signal is present at the frequency of the carrier to which the modulation signal was applied. This is sometimes called conversion to baseband. Heterodyne detection employs a carrier signal that is of a different frequency than that of the carrier signal to which the modulation signal was applied. The resultant detected signal may therefore be translated in frequency with respect to the original modulation spectrum.
a shows an optical filter with multiple flat-topped passbands, different passband widths and spacings, and sharp band edge transitions.
In an aspect, the notch filters of
a is an example of stepped band-pass microwave filter with a flat-topped response, where the step depth may be controlled by programming the SLM 240. Starting with a filter with a flat approximately 10 GHz passband as a reference (dotted curve), two steps that drop down by about 10 dB, symmetrically within the passband, are programmed. Thus, optical or electrical filtering functions may be engineered for specific applications.
The SLM used to obtain the experimental data presented herein was programmable; however, fixed characteristic optical filters may also be used.
As is evident from equation (4), the electrical and optical phase responses are linked. Since optical pulse shapers or optical filters may be configured to be dispersion-free, a linear-phase characteristic may be achieved in the electrical response.
A low-pass transmission region may be observed below about 600 MHz in
An EDFA 40, or other optical amplifier, may be used in the photonic portion of the apparatus to increase the signal amplitude, subject to additional noise that may result from the amplification process. Progress in optical devices optimized generally for microwave photonics applications can also be exploited to enhance the apparatus and method: for example, modulators with high linearity as well as low driving voltage, and photodiodes with high responsitivity and bandwidth.
Microwave phase filtering performance may be measured using a vector network analyzer (VNA) (not shown), in place of the network analyzer 70. Various microwave spectral phase filtering results are presented. The VNA used in the experiments had a bandwidth limited to DC to 20 GHz. A group of 31 contiguous SLM pixels is used to match the 20 GHz bandwidth limitation. However, it would be apparent to a person of skill in the art that the concepts presented herein are not limited except by the specific device capabilities which may exist or which may be economically practical for a specific application.
b-d show examples of the microwave power response measured by the VNA. The power transmission response of three positive-slope cases (4π/20 GHz, 8π/20 GHz, 12π/20 GHz) are shown, in each case together with a reference curve corresponding to the power response with the SLM 240 programmed for constant phase. The negative-slope cases (not shown) are similar. For the case of 4π total phase variation, the power response is very close to the reference. However, for larger total phase variations, notches appear in the power response. The liquid crystal SLM used has a limited continuously programmable phase range, and a wrapped phase profile was applied when the range of the targeted phase profile exceeded the SLM phase range. The applied phase range was limited to 4π; and for larger phase excursions phase is applied modulo 4π. This leads to phase jumps of 4π at certain pixel locations. Ideally, phase jumps of 4π in a double-pass optical filter arrangement should have no effect on the amplitude; in practice, effects which may arise from discontinuities in the liquid crystal orientations may lead to notches at the locations of the 4π phase jumps. In addition, smaller phase jumps resulting from the discrete (pixelated) nature of the phase programmed onto the individual cells of the SLM may cause additional amplitude notches. These additional notches become larger for increasing phase change per pixel and are most obvious (˜1.5 dB power fluctuation) in
In an aspect, phase filtering may be used to compensate for the characteristics of, for example antennas used in wideband communications, radar, and sensor systems. The amplitude distortions associated with frequency-dependent antenna gain, path loss and radar target cross-section may be compensated in the transmitted or received signal so as to improve such characteristics of signal-to noise ration, pulse width, signal sidelobes, and the like, and these effects may be applied either statically or dynamically. The result may be a matched filter system, whose characteristics may be determined analytically, by component measurement, or by adaptive techniques.
In yet another aspect, the characteristics of a wideband modulation signal may be modified in amplitude and phase to meet specific regulatory or technical requirements for signal bandwidth, resolution, peak-to-average power, and the like, using Fourier transform or other techniques of computation, characterization or measurement.
When used with a pulsed microwave modulation source, the apparatus of
The optical signal was then directed onto a fast photodiode 60 (60 GHz electrical bandwidth), which functions as the opto-electrical (O/E) converter, and the resulting electrical waveform measured (after a DC blocking filter in the case of coherent heterodyne detection) on a sampling oscilloscope 75 with a 50 GHz electrical bandwidth. Optical amplifiers (not shown) were used to adjust the power level incident onto the photodiode 60. When a strong carrier wave signal is present, homodyne beating arising from coherent interference between the optical carrier and the modulated optical field components dominates. In this case, optical phase information is transferred coherently into the electrical domain (
Since photodiodes convert directly from optical power to electrical current, direct detection (which occurs when the carrier is suppressed, A=0,
a-b show shows the electrical waveform generated after opto-electric (O/E) conversion, in the strong carrier wave case (Vb=Vπ/2), which may be used in ultra-wideband (UWB) waveform synthesis. Half of the optical spectrum is programmed for 0 phase shift and half for π phase shift. This phase shift pattern results in an optical field that is anti-symmetric in frequency; the field amplitude changes sign at the center of the spectrum, as in
c shows data for the same optical filter function as in
In another example of waveform synthesis, the optical pulse shaper 2 is used to generate a cubic spectral-phase function. Specifically, the SLM 240 was programmed for a phase profile ψ(n)=±2π[(n−60)/20]3 for pixel numbers N in the range 40 to 80. A cubic spectral phase results in an asymmetric waveform with an oscillatory tail appearing on one side of the main pulse (the side depending on the sign of the cubic phase). This effect may be understood through the well known relation
that relates the dispersion, that is, the frequency-dependent group delay function τ(ω) to the derivative of frequency-dependent phase with respect to angular frequency ω. For the cubic phase case, τ(ω) is quadratic, and the dispersion broadens the pulse asymmetrically towards either positive time or negative time, depending on the sign of the cubic phase. Furthermore, the quadratic dispersion function imparts the same time shift to low and high frequency components as long as they are offset equally from the center frequency, and these components can interfere with each other to yield a ringing in time.
Data are shown in
In another example, programmable control of time delay is performed. A frequency-independent time delay corresponds to a linear-phase function in the frequency domain. Accordingly, the output signal may be shifted forward or backward in time by programming the SLM 240 with appropriate linear-phase functions. Techniques for achieving such true-time-delays may be used, for example, for wide instantaneous beam steering of phased array antenna systems.
c shows further experimental results. Data are shown for eleven different cases, where the SLM 240 is programmed for a phase profile
for m=−10, −8 . . . 0 . . . 8, 10 and pixel numbers N in the range 40 to 80. The data shown are for the case of incoherent operation, although comparable results are obtained with coherent homodyne O/E conversion. The case m=0, for which the SLM 240 is effectively deactivated, is taken as the time reference (t=0 in plot); in this way, fixed delays associated with propagation through the optical filter or pulse shaper, and optical and electrical cables are compensated. Each of the traces is shifted to a distinct time position, either forward or backward in time depending on the sign of m. A time shift between adjacent pulses of (2π/20)/(2π*0.7 GHz)≈71 ps, and total time delay of 710 ps is expected. The experimental results show 700 ps total time delay, approximately 15 times the duration of the individual pulse widths (45 ps for the m=0 pulse), with minimal distortion. The small pulse broadening observed for the larger time shifts is attributed to curvature in the VIPA spectral dispersion function, which was not taken into account in programming the SLM 240 of the optical filter 2 in this experiment.
The programmable increases or decreases in propagation time obtained by using the present apparatus rely on a parallel manipulation of frequency-dependent optical phase. The ability to displace a pulse over a time range exceeding its duration by more than an order of magnitude (either in the optical or in the electrical domain) with little distortion, is far superior to results reported in slow/fast light experiments, where strong frequency-dependent loss or group velocity dispersion associated with resonant structures has usually limited the range of operation to time delays on the order of the pulse duration or less.
An example of the use of photonic spectral filtering in a system is shown in
The apparatus of
The apparatus of
Although only a few exemplary embodiments of this invention have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the exemplary embodiments without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of the invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined in the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional application No. 60/837,206, filed on Aug. 11, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference.
The work described in this application was sponsored in part by the U.S. Army Research Office under Grant No. DAAD19-03-1-0275.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60837206 | Aug 2006 | US |