Physical encryption and decryption for secure data transmission in optical networks leveraging the temporal Talbot effect and microwave photonics
Chulun Lin, Taixia Shi, Yiqing Liu, Yang Chen

TL;DR
This paper introduces a physical encryption scheme for optical data transmission using the temporal Talbot effect and microwave photonics, achieving secure, error-free 8-Gbit/s data transfer over fiber links up to 200 km.
Contribution
It presents a novel physical encryption and decryption method leveraging the temporal Talbot effect in dispersive media for secure optical communication.
Findings
Secure data transmission at 8 Gbit/s demonstrated
Error-free transmission over 10 to 200 km fiber links
Analysis of factors affecting encryption and transmission performance
Abstract
A novel microwave photonic scheme for secure data transmission in optical networks is proposed. The security of the scheme is guaranteed by physical encryption and decryption via the temporal Talbot effect in dispersive mediums. First, the original data is randomized in the digital domain by performing an exclusive OR operation using a random matrix. Subsequently, a time-varying multi-tone electrical signal, which represents the randomized data matrix, is modulated onto an optical carrier. The optical signal after modulation is then phase-modulated by a temporal Talbot array illuminator (TAI) signal, and the optical signal after discrete quadratic phase modulation will lose its original appearance in the frequency domain and be further dispersed in the first dispersive medium. Due to the dispersion that does not match the TAI signal exactly, the waveform after the first dispersive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Photonic Communication Systems · Advanced Optical Imaging Technologies · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
