Optical MIMO Communication Using Holographic Spectral Multiplexing of Pulsed Ultrashort Laser
Alireza Khodaei, Jitender Deogun

TL;DR
This paper introduces Holographic Spectral Multiplexing (HSM), a novel optical MIMO technique using ultrashort laser pulses and holograms to significantly increase data rates without physical space separation of channels.
Contribution
HSM leverages spectral space and holography for optical MIMO, enabling high-entropy data encoding and exponential rate gains in optical communication.
Findings
HSM achieves high spectral efficiency through holographic line codes.
HSM allows multiple data streams to propagate in the same space, increasing capacity.
Exponential information rate improvements demonstrated in theory.
Abstract
In this paper, we introduce Holographic Spectral Multiplexing (HSM) as a novel technique to enable multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) communication in optical networks. HSM uses the spectral space of ultrashort laser pulses to create line codes in the form of 2D holograms. The pulse processing is performed in the temporal Fourier domain by spatially dispersing the pulse frequency components in a spectral processing device (SPD). The 2D holograms are composed of the patterns of intensity disparities that an SLM inscribes on the spectrally-decomposed Fourier plane of the pulse. The holographic line codes defined in this way transform the ultrashort laser pulses into high-entropy data symbols, hence, enhance the communication's spectral efficiency. Unlike conventional optical multiplexing schemes (e.g., TDM, WDM, or SDM), HSM does not physically or abstractly separate the communication…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Network Technologies · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Advanced Photonic Communication Systems
