Automatic Mitigation of Dynamic Atmospheric Turbulence Using Optical Phase Conjugation for Coherent Free-Space Optical Communications
Huibin Zhou, Xinzhou Su, Yuxiang Duan, Yue Zuo, Zile Jiang,, Muralekrishnan Ramakrishnan, Jan Tepper, Volker Ziegler, Robert W. Boyd,, Moshe Tur, Alan E. Willner

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel optical phase conjugation method using four-wave mixing in GaAs crystals that automatically mitigates dynamic atmospheric turbulence in high-speed free-space optical communications, achieving rapid response times and high data rates.
Contribution
It introduces a high-speed, rapid-response optical phase conjugation technique that significantly improves turbulence mitigation in coherent FSO links compared to prior methods.
Findings
Achieved 8 Gbit/s data rate with <5 ms response time.
Demonstrated ~10 dB improvement in mixing efficiency under turbulence.
Effective turbulence mitigation at Greenwood frequencies up to ~260 Hz.
Abstract
Coherent detection can provide enhanced receiver sensitivity and spectral efficiency in free-space optical (FSO) communications. However, turbulence can cause modal power coupling effects on a Gaussian data beam and significantly degrade the mixing efficiency between the data beam and a Gaussian local oscillator (LO) in the coherent detector. Optical phase conjugation (OPC) in a photorefractive crystal can "automatically" mitigate turbulence by: (a) recording a back-propagated turbulence-distorted probe beam, and (b) creating a phase-conjugate beam that has the inverse phase distortion of the medium as the transmitted data beam. However, previously reported crystal-based OPC approaches for FSO links have demonstrated either: (i) a relatively fast response time of 35 ms but at a relatively low data rate (e.g., <1 Mbit/s), or (ii) a relatively high data rate of 2-Gbit/s but at a slow…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Wireless Communication Technologies
