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1.
Opt Express ; 32(12): 20976-20991, 2024 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38859464

ABSTRACT

Optical feeder links offer immense utility in meeting future communication demands-however, atmospheric turbulence limits their performance. This work targets this challenge through analyses of a bidirectional free-space optical communication (FSOC) link that incorporates pre-distortion adaptive optics (AO) between the next-generation optical ground station at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen and the laser communications terminal on Alphasat-a satellite in geostationary orbit (GEO). The analyses are performed via end-to-end Monte Carlo simulations that provide realistic performance estimates of the bidirectional FSOC link for a GEO feeder link scenario. We find that applying pre-distortion AO reduces the total uplink losses of the bidirectional FSOC link by up to 10 dB and lessens the scintillation at the GEO satellite by an order of magnitude. Moreover, applying pre-distortion AO eases the link budget requirements needed for maintaining 99.9% link uptime by as much as 20-40 dB, while its use with a laser guide star shows an additional performance improvement of up to 8 dB. These findings demonstrate the desirability and feasibility of utilizing pre-distortion AO for the realization of optical feeder links.

2.
Appl Opt ; 61(2): 498-504, 2022 Jan 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35200889

ABSTRACT

Future spacecraft missions aim to communicate with the Earth using near-infrared lasers. The possible bit rate of free-space optical communication (FSOC) is orders of magnitude greater when compared to current radio frequency transmissions. The challenge of ground-space FSOC is that atmospheric turbulence perturbs optical wavefront propagation. These wavefront aberrations can be measured using a Shack-Hartmann wavefront sensor (SHWFS). A ground-based adaptive optics (AO) system can mitigate these aberrations along the optical path by translating wavefront measurements into deformable mirror commands. However, errors result from atmospheric turbulence continuously evolving, and there are unavoidable delays during AO wavefront correction. The length of an acceptable delay is referred to as the coherence time-a parameter dependent on the strength of turbulence profile layers and their corresponding wind-driven velocity. This study introduces a novel technique, to the best of our knowledge, for using SHWFS single-source observations, e.g., the downlink signal from a geostationary satellite, to measure the strength and velocity of turbulence profile layers. This work builds upon previous research and demonstrates that single-source observations can disentangle turbulence profile layers through studying the cross-covariance of temporally offset SHWFS centroid measurements. Simulated data are used to verify that the technique can recover the coherence time. The expected and measured results have a correlation coefficient of 0.95.

3.
Opt Express ; 29(4): 6113-6132, 2021 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33726139

ABSTRACT

We present the results from a Monte Carlo computer simulation of adaptive optics (AO) pre-compensated laser uplink propagation through the Earth's atmospheric turbulence from the ground to orbiting satellites. The simulation includes the so-called point-ahead angle and tests several potential AO mitigation modes such as tip/tilt or full AO from the downlink beam, and a laser guide star at the point ahead angle. The performance of these modes, as measured by metrics relevant for free-space optical communication, are compared with no correction and perfect correction. The aim of the study is to investigate fundamental limitations of free-space optical communications with AO pre-compensation and a point-ahead angle, therefore the results represent an upper bound of AO corrected performance, demonstrating the potential of pre-compensation technology. Performance is assessed with varying launch aperture size, wavelength, launch geometry, ground layer turbulence strength (i.e. day/night), elevation angle and satellite orbit (Low-Earth and Geostationary). By exploring this large parameter space we are able examine trends on performance with the aim of informing the design of future optical ground stations and demonstrating and quantifying the potential upper bounds of adaptive optics performance in free-space optical communications.

4.
Opt Express ; 26(13): 16044-16053, 2018 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30119441

ABSTRACT

Wavefront distortions of optical waves propagating through the turbulent atmosphere are responsible for phase and amplitude fluctuations, causing random fading in the signal coupled into single-mode optical fibers. Wavefront aberrations can be confronted, in principle, with adaptive optics technology that compensates the incoming optical signal by the phase conjugation principle and mitigates the likeliness of fading. However, real-time adaptive optics requires phase wavefront measurements, which are generally difficult under typical propagation conditions for communication scenarios. As an alternative to the conventional adaptive optics approach, here, we discuss a novel phase-retrieval technique that indirectly determines the unknown phase wavefront from focal-plane intensity measurements. The adaptation approach is based on sequential optimization of the speckle pattern in the focal plane and works by iteratively updating the phases of individual speckles to maximize the received power. We found in our analysis that this technique can compensate the distorted phasefront and increase the signal coupled with a significant reduction in the required number of iterations, resulting in a loop bandwidth utilization well within the capacity of commercially available deformable mirrors.

5.
Opt Lett ; 42(11): 2173-2176, 2017 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28569874

ABSTRACT

Binary phase-shift keying optical transmission in the C-band with coherent intradyne reception is demonstrated over a long-range (10.45 km) link through the atmosphere. The link emulates representative channel conditions for geostationary optical feeder uplinks in satellite communications. The digital signal processing used in recovering the transmitted data and the performed measurements are described. Finally, the bit error rate results for 10 Gbit/s, 20 Gbit/s, and 30 Gbit/s of the outdoor experiments are presented and compared with back-to-back measurements and theory.

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