CA2165564C - Dispersion compensation in an optical communications system - Google Patents

Dispersion compensation in an optical communications system Download PDF

Info

Publication number
CA2165564C
CA2165564C CA002165564A CA2165564A CA2165564C CA 2165564 C CA2165564 C CA 2165564C CA 002165564 A CA002165564 A CA 002165564A CA 2165564 A CA2165564 A CA 2165564A CA 2165564 C CA2165564 C CA 2165564C
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
optical
semiconductor
amplifier
fibre
signals
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA002165564A
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
CA2165564A1 (en
Inventor
Martin Christopher Tatham
Gerard Sherlock
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
British Telecommunications PLC
Original Assignee
British Telecommunications PLC
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by British Telecommunications PLC filed Critical British Telecommunications PLC
Publication of CA2165564A1 publication Critical patent/CA2165564A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA2165564C publication Critical patent/CA2165564C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/25Arrangements specific to fibre transmission
    • H04B10/2507Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion
    • H04B10/2513Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to chromatic dispersion
    • H04B10/2531Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to chromatic dispersion using spectral inversion
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/50Amplifier structures not provided for in groups H01S5/02 - H01S5/30
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/29Repeaters
    • H04B10/291Repeaters in which processing or amplification is carried out without conversion of the main signal from optical form
    • H04B10/2912Repeaters in which processing or amplification is carried out without conversion of the main signal from optical form characterised by the medium used for amplification or processing
    • H04B10/2914Repeaters in which processing or amplification is carried out without conversion of the main signal from optical form characterised by the medium used for amplification or processing using lumped semiconductor optical amplifiers [SOA]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S5/00Semiconductor lasers
    • H01S5/50Amplifier structures not provided for in groups H01S5/02 - H01S5/30
    • H01S5/5054Amplifier structures not provided for in groups H01S5/02 - H01S5/30 in which the wavelength is transformed by non-linear properties of the active medium, e.g. four wave mixing

Abstract

A method of compensating for dispersion in an optical communications system, the method comprising the steps of: positioning a semiconductor amplifier between a first and a second length of optical fibre, launching optical signals into the first length of optical fibre, directing optical signals emerging from the first length of optical fibre into the semiconductor optical amplifier, supplying optical pump radiation to the semiconductor optical amplifier so that the optical signals and the pump radiation interact within the semiconductor opdcal amplifier and generate the phase conjugate of the optical signals, snd launching the phase conjugate optical signals into the second length of optical fibre.

Description

WO95/~6~ 216 ~ 5 6 4 PCT/GB94/~602 ~ -- 1 --DISPERSION COMPENSATION IN AN OPTICAL
COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for compensating for dispersion in optical communications systems, and in particular to methods and apparatus employing optical phase conjugation.
In order to have a high transmission capacity, an optical communications system must have low dispersion, this means that pulses of light travelling along the waveguide, generally an optical fibre, of the optical communica-tions system should not suffer significant distortion. This distortion may arise from a number of sources. If the optical communications system employs multi-mode fibre, each of the different modes will have a different group velocity, 15 thus modulated signals, i.e. pulses of light passing down the multi-mode optical fibre, which are made up of a number of different modes of the waveguide will experience a different group delay from each of their modes. This causes a pulse formed from more than one mode to spread out as it 20 propagates, and is called intermodal dispersion. Once consecutive pulse have spread out so that they are no longer distinguishable, one from the other, the information transmission limit of the optical communications system has been reached. This limit is expressed as a bandwidth 25 distance product since it will be reached at a higher bit rate for a shorter optical communications link. Intermodal dispersion between the modes of multi-mode fibres is one of the reasons why modern optical communications systems have moved to the use of single mode optical fibre which, since it 30 only supports one optical mode, does not suffer from intermodal dispersion.
However single mode optical communications systems do suffer from pulse spreading due to the small, but finite bandwidth of the optical source employed. This type of pulse spreading is called chromatic dispersion, and is due to two effects. Firstly, material dispersion is present because the refractive index of a dispersive medium, such as silica from SU~STITUTE S~EET (RUI.E 26~

W095l~6~ ~6~ - 2 - PCT/GB94/00602 which optical fibres are typically made, depends on wavelength. Secondly, waveguide dispersion, since the propagation characteristics of the single mode supported by a single mode fibre also depend on wavelength. Since the material dispersion of silica is positive at most wavelengths of interest for optical communications systems, and the waveguide dispersion for single mode fibres is negative, these two effects can be carefully balanced in a well designed optical fibre so as to give zero total, chromatic dispersion at the operating wavelength of the optical communications system.
The vast majority of optical communications systems which have been installed worldwide contain single mode optical fibre which has been designed for use in the 1.3~m low loss window, and as such has low chromatic dispersion at this wavelength. In recent years the rapid development of erbium doped fibre amplifiers (EDFA) has meant that fibre loss, and thus the power- budget of optical communications systems, is no longer the fundamental limit to achievable 20 transmission distance. However these EDFAs are only operable in the 1.55~m optical transmission window so that if existing optical communication links are to be upgraded, for example to operate at higher bit rates, these systems must operate in the 1.55~m at window, over optical fibre designed for use at 1.3~m. Thus the fundamental bandwidth distance product transmission limit when upgrading an existing optical communications system is that imposed by dispersion.
Furthermore, even for systems having fibre designed for use at 1.55~m, as very high bit rates are approached, unless very narrow linewidth, externally modulated lasers are employed, dispersion again is the fundamental limit to transmission capacity.
A number of methods of compensating for dispersion are known. In one such technique the optical signal, at the transmitter end of the optical communications system, is deliberately distorted before being launched into the optical fibre. The distortion imposed upon the optical signal must W095/~3 21 6~ ~ 1 PCT/GB94/~602 be calculated so as to be compensated by the dispersion that-the optical signal subsequently suffers during propagation along the optical fibre. An example of such a technique is that disclosed by Koch and Alferness in "Dispersion Compensation By Active Predistorted Signals Synthesis"
Journal of Lightwave Technology, volume LT-3, no. 4, August 1985. In order to successfully apply these techniques the transmission characteristics of the particular optical fibre employed, and the length of the transmission link need to be 10 known so that the predistorted signal can be correctly synthesised. Generally the optical source employed in these systems needs to be sophisticated, and thus complex, 80 a8 to allow independent control of the amplitude and frequency of the optical signal. The problems inherent in predistortion 15 dispersion compensation systems are considerably exacerbated for higher bit rate systems, where indeed dispersion compensation is of greatest importance.
In a second, known dispersion compensation technique a negative dispersion optical fibre is employed to compensate either at the transmission end, or at the receiver end of the optical link for the positive dispersion suffered by optical signals propagating along the transmission optical fibre.
When optical signals at 1.55~m are transmitted along a transmission optical fibre having a dispersion zero at 1.3~m, 2S the signals will suffer positive dispersion i.e. the sign of the differential of their group delay with wavelength, will be positive, and will typically be of the order of 17ps/km/nm. Single mode optical fibre can be specifically designed to have a large negative chromatic dispersion, by choosing the waveguide parameters to give large negative waveguide dispersion, for èxample a fibre having a core of small diameter and high refractive index will have negative waveguide dispersion. Such a scheme was employed by Izadpanah et al in "Dispersion Compensation In 1310nm 35 Optimised SMFs Using Optical Equaliser Fibre, EDFAs And 1310/lSSOnm WDM" Electronics Letters, 16 July 1992, volume 28, no. 15, page 1469. Izadpanah et al employed a specially WO 9~1.3C~3 PCT/GB94/00602 2~6556~ ~

designed negative dispersion fibre having a di~persion of -45ps/km/nm. The length of negative dispersion fibre required was approximately one third of the length of the transmission link over which dispersion was being compensated. Such large lengths of additional fibre are clearly inconvenient and expensive. Furthermore due to the high level of doping used in the core, and the small core size this fibre had a relatively high loss, so that amplification of the optical signal is essential, even if the 10 bit rate of the system is not increased.
A third form of dispersion compensation has been theoretically proposed by Yariv et al in "Compensation For Channel Dispersion By Non-linear Optical Phase Conjugation"
Optics Letters, volume 4, no. 2, February 1979. Yariv et al 15 proposed that by generating an optical phase conjugate replica of the optical signal after it has passed through one half of the optical transmission link, and launching this phase conjugate replica into the second half of the optical transmission link, the effects of the dispersion suffered by the optical signal in the first half of the link will be reversed and the optical signal will be restored to its original shape. This technique relies on the time inversion of the group velocity dispersion of the optical signal caused by phase conjugation, and thus requires that the dispersion 25 in the second half of the optical transmission link is the same as the dispersion in the first half, if it is to be fully compensated for.
Yariv's proposal has been implemented in an optical communications system ~y employing non-degenerate four wave 30 mixing (NDFWM) in dispersion shifted fibre (DSF) to provide the necessary optical phase conjugation. In this case the phase conjugate optical signals travel in the same direction as the copropagating pump light and original optical signal.
This technique has been demonstrated by Watanabe et al in "Compensation Of Chromatic Dispersion In A Single Mode Fibre BY Optical Phase Conjugation~ IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, volume 5, no. 1, January 1993 and by Jopson et al in ,. - 21 6S~6LI
-"Compensation Of Fibre Chromatic Dispersion By Spectral Inversion" Electronics Letters, 1 April 1993, volume 29, no. 7. In both cases long lengths, over 20km, of carefully designed DSF were required. A DSF is a fibre which has been designed to have zero dispersion in the 1.55~Lm telecommunications window, i.e.
5 its dispersion zero has been shifted from 1.3~1m to around 1.55~m. In addition to this requirement, Watanabe and Jopson furthermore needed to arrange for the wavelength of the pump light required for NDFWM in the DSF to be the same as the zero dispersion wavelength of the DSF, in order to achieve sufficient phase matching between the pump and the optical signals. This requirement for phase 10 matching over the 20km of the DSF is severe, and means that the wavelength ofthe pump light must be carefully controlled e.g. over 20km with a pump and signal separation of 2nm the pump wavelength must be within approximately 1 nm of the dispersion zero wavelength. Furthermore this requirement`becomes more severe as the length of the DSF increases, and rapidly more severe as the wavelength 15 separation of the pump and signal is increased. The efficiency of conversion of the optical signal to its phase conjugate replica achieved by both Watanabe and Jopson is low, approximately -25dB in both cases. Thus the phase conjugate signal to be launched into the second half of the optical transmission link is at a very low level.
It has been suggested by Murata et al in "THz Optical Frequency Conversion Of 1 Gb/s Signals Using Highly Non-degenerate Four Wave Mixing In An InGaAsP Semiconductor Laser" IEEE Transactions Photonics Technology Letters, volume 3, no. 11, November 1991, that Yariv's phase conjugation technique for dispersion compensation could be implemented by employing a 25 semiconductor Fabry-Perot laser as the phase conjugating device. This suggestion has not, however been demonstrated.
Another known technique for dispersion compensation is described in "Chirping Compensation Using a Two-Section Semiconductor Laser Amplifier" -Journal of Lightwave Technology, vol. 10, no. 9, Sept 1992, pages 1247-1254.
The present invention provides a method of compensating for dispersion in an optical communications system, the method comprising the PN~END~ S~E~

W095/~653 PCT/GB94100602 2165~ 64 6 steps of i) positioning a semiconductor optical amplifier between a first and a second length of optical fibre, ii) launching optical signals into the first length of optical fibre, iii) directing optical signals emerging from the first length of optical fibre into the semiconductor optical amplifier, ivl supplying optical pump radiation to the semiconductor optical amplifier so that the optical signals and the pump radiation within the semiconductor optical amplifier and generate the phase conjugate of the optical signals, and v) launching the phase conjugate optical signals into the second length of optical fibre.

The method of the present invention thus overcomes the disadvantages inherent in using DSF to provide optical phase conjugation, by employing a semiconductor optical amplifier.
These devices are of a short length, of order one hundred microns, so that phase matching between the pump radiation and the optical signal is easily achieved. Since semiconductor optical amplifiers have gain, the efficiency of 30 the optical phase conjugation process is far higher than for passive DSFs.
The applicants have surprisingly found the method of the present invention successful in compensation for dispersion in optical communications systems, despite the fact that there is substantially no cavity enhancement of the optical phase conjugation in a semiconductor optical amplifier. The theoretical suggestion by Murata et al leads WO9SI03~3 21 6S PCT/GB94/00602 the skilled man to expect that substantial cavity enhancement of the four wave mixing process by a resonant structure, for example a Fabry-Perot laser, is essential to the achievement of sufficient optical phase conjugation efficiency. The applicants have discovered, not only that this is not the case, but that there are significant advantages in employing a semiconductor optical amplifier rather than a semiconductor laser. When a significant degree of cavity, or resonance, enhancement is employed the pump and optical signal must both be accurately controlled in wavelength so that they are coincident with one of the cavity modes, thus requiring accurate wavelength control over these signals. The pump radiation wavelength in particular must coincide with that of one of the cavity modes of the Fabry-Perot laser to injection lock it, and these modes typically have an injection locking bandwidth of only a few GHz. Furthermore the use of resonance enhancement inherently places a limitation on the modulation bandwidth that can be imposed on the optical signal. This is because if the bandwidth of the optical signal begins to approach the bandwidth of the cavity resonance, the cavity resonance will act as a spectral filter to the optical signal, causing distortion of the modulation pattern of the optical signal. This effect will become more severe as the modulation bandwidth of the optical signal increases, and particular far more severe if the optical signals are not transform-limited, for example if the transmitter has significant linewidth or suffers from chirp.
A further disadvantage, inherent to all resonant devices, is their instability under temperature variations or mechanical vibration.
Preferably a semiconductor optical amplifier employed in the method of the present lnvention has a variation in gain with wavelength, caused by facet reflections, of less than SdB i.e. the amplitude of the so called "gain ripple" is less than SdB. The Applicants have determined that semiconductor optical amplifiers having a gain ripple less than 5dBs will not suffer substantially from the WO55,~?~.'3 PCT/GB94/00602 2 1 65 ~ 6~ - 8 -disadvantages of cavity enhancement, for example the optical signal bandwidth restriction discussed above. As will be described hereinafter such semiconductor optical amplifiers do, however, benefit to a small degree from some cavity enhancement.
Preferably the semiconductor optical amplifier employed in the present invention has facet reflectivities of less than 103. This effectively ensures that, for single pass gains of up to 20 dB, the semiconductor optical amplifier is a travelling wave amplifier, having no cavity enhancement.
Preferably the wavelength of the optical signal and the wavelength of the pump radiation are separated by at least lnm. This ensures that the four wave mixing undergone by the optical signals and the pump radiation is highly non-degenerate. This is desirable since highly non-degenerate FNM (NDFWM) is based on an ultra-fast intraband optical non-linear gain process which has a very short response time, less than lps, and thus allows the present wavelength dispersion compensation technique to be applicable to optical communications systems operating at bit rates up to tera bits per second.
Advantageously the gain of the semiconductor optical amplifier is saturated by the pump radiation. The applicants have surprisingly discovered that operating the semiconductor optical amplifier under saturation increases the ratio of the phase conjugated signal to the background spontaneous emission.
In addition, or alternatively, the semiconductor optical amplifier is advantageously operated with a high injection current. Although both the level of the phase conjugated optical signals, and the background spontaneous emission increase with increasing injection current, it has been found that the rate of increase in the level of the 35 phase conjugated optical signal is greater than that of the background spontaneous emission, so that the signal to background ratio may be increased by increasing the injection WOg5/036~ 21 ~ PCT/GB94/00602 current.
Although the optical pump radiation may be supplied to the semiconductor optical amplifier via the first length of optical fibre, advantageously the optical pump radiation is supplied to the semiconductor optical amplifier from an optical pump source co-located with the semiconductor optical amplifier. This arrangement ensures that the optical pump radiation does not suffer, for example from Brillouin scattering in the first optical fibre.
Advantageously, the optical pump radiation supplied to the semiconductor optical amplifier is generated within the semiconductor optical amplifier. This may be achieved, for example, if both the semiconductor optical amplifier and the optical pump source are comprised by a semiconductor device 15 having wavelength selective feedback means, for example a distributed feedback (DFB) laser, or a distributed Bragg reflector laser. In this case the pump radiation for four wave mixing, rather than being supplied to the semiconductor optical amplifier from an optical pump source distinct from the semiconductor optical amplifier, is generated by the interaction of the wavelength selective feedback means with the gain medium of the semiconductor optical amplifier.
Thus, in this case, a single semiconductor device, for example a DFB laser, acts as both a source of narrow linewidth pump radiation, and the non-linear medium in which four wave mixing occurs. Hence only the optical signals are injected into the single semiconductor device, and the phase conjugated optical signals are extracted from the semiconductor device. Preferably the wavelength selective feedback means provide strong optical feedback only at the pump wavelength, so as to avoid causing spectral filtering of the optical signals, or the phase conjugate optical signals.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided an optical communications system comprising a transmission path including a first optical fibre and a second optical fibre, an optical signal source for launching optical signals into the first optical fibre, an optical pump W095/~6~ PCT/GB94/00602 2l6ss64 - 10-source for generating pump radiation, and a semiconductor optical amplifier having an input from the first optical fibre and an output to the second optical fibre, wherein, in use, the semiconductor optical amplifier receives the pump radiation and the optical signals, after said signals have propagated through the first optical fibre, and generates phase conjugate replicas of the optical signals, which replicas are launched into the second optical fibre.
According to a third aspect of the present invention a semiconductor optical amplifier is used to provide phase conjugation of optical signals in an optical communication link and thereby to substantially compensate for dispersion suffered by the optical signals during propagation along the optical communications link.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying figures, in which Figure l(a) shows the output spectrum of a SOO~m Fabry-Perot laser with the laser free-running, with 64mA
injection current, (b) shows the injection-loced spectrum of the same laser with -6.7dBm light coupled into the device from an LEC laser operating at 1.557249~m;
Figure 2 shows non-degenerate four-wave mixing in an injection locked Fabry-Perot laser around the 5th resonance, (a) shows the spectrum off-resonance, with the probe laser wavelength between two FP modes, (b) shows the spectrum on resonance, with the probe laser wavelength tuned to the peak of the FP resonance;
Figure 3 shows non-degenerate four-wave mixing in an injection locked Fabry-Perot laser around the 14th resonance, (a) shows the spectrum off-resonance, (b) shows the spectrum on resonance;
Figure 4 shows resonance profiles for (a) the NDFWM
conjugate signal, and (b) the probe laser signal, in an injection-locked Fabry-Perot laser;
Figure 5 shows facet output powers, from a FP laser, of the pump, probe and NDFWM conjugate signals(to short and W095/~3 21 6~S PCTIGB94/00602 long wavelengths) at the peak of each resonance, as a function of the pump probe detuning;
Figure 6 shows resonance lineshapes for a FP laser for the pump, probe and NDFWM conjugate signal (short wavelength) for (a) the 5th and (b) the 14th resonance away from the FP
resonance at which the pump is injected, the abscissae showing the pump-probe detuning frequencies;
Figure 7 shows the theoretical variation of the resonance enhancement and the bandwidth of cavity-enhanced lO NDFWM with gain ripple;
Figure 8 shows the experimental arrangement for an embodiment of the invention;
Figure 9 shows optical spectra measured at the output of the SOA shown in Figure 8, (a) with the DFB signal, and lS (b) without the DFB signal (offset by -lOdB);
Figure 10 shows eye diagrams for the arrangement of Figure 8 for (a) the back-to-back arrangement, (b) lOOkm transmission without dispersion compensation, and (c) lOOkm transmission with dispersion compensation (measurements were 20 made using a 2.5Gbit/s optical receiver, with -26dBm received power);
Figure 11 shows bit error rate curves for the back-to-back arrangement, lOOkm transmission without dispersion compensation, and lOOkm transmission with dispersion compensation 2.488Gbit/s (215-1) NRZ pseudo-random se~uence;
Figure 12 shows the power of the phase conjugate signal and signal-to-background ratio as a function of the chip gain of a travelling wave amplifier (TWA).
Figure 13 shows phase conjugate power and signal-to-30 background ratio as a function of the total fibre input power(pump+signal). (The curve is a guide to the eye).
The applicants have carried out experiments, and a theoretical analysis, to determine the effect of cavity enhancement on NDFWM. These experiments and analysis will first be described, followed by a description of an optical communications system according to an embodiment of the present invention.

2 16S 5 6 l _ 12 -A number of experiments have been carried out with Fabry-Perot lasers i.e. devices having very high levels of cavity enhancement, by injecting two signals, a pump and a probe into these lasers, and tuning the wavelength of the pump and the probe across the Fabry-Perot (FP) resonances of the lasers. Figure la shows the output spectrum from a 500~m Fabry-Perot laser, having 16 multiple quantum wells tMQW), when the laser is free running, with 64mA injection current.
It can be seen from this figure that the output on resonance is some 30dBs greater than off resonance. Figure lb shows the output spectrum from the same Fabry-Perot laser following injection locking with -6.7dBm light from the tunable pump source.
Light from the probe source was coupled into the Fabry-Perot laser, maintaining the input power constant at -13.6dBm (coupled-in power). With the wavelength of the pump maintained at 1.557249~m, the wavelength of the probe was tuned through the FP resonances of the pump to longer wavelengths, with up to 9.7nm (1.19Thz) detuning between the two inputs. Output spectra with two inputs are shown in Figures 2(a) & (b) (for -3nm, 370GHz detuning between the pump and probe and in Figures 3(a) & (b) (for -9nm, l.lTHz detuning); in both cases Figure (a) shows the spectrum off resonance and (b) the spectrum on resonance. The effect of the cavity FP resonances on the NDFWM is, qualitatively, very clear: when the wavelength of the probe lies in between two FP resonances (off resonance), no conjugate signals could be observed, but tuning the probe to the peak of the FP
resonance causes a dramatic increase in the conjugate beam 30 power.
The optical power in the NDFWM conjugate beam (to shorter wavelengths) and the probe laser outputs are shown in Figures 4(a) & (b), respectively, as a function of the pump-probe detuning. The powers were determined from the measured spectra, but the system was calibrated to obtain actual facet powers. Both the conjugate and probe beams show resonances, corresponding to each of the 14 FP resonances, with narrow ~ - 13 - ~1 6~ ~

linewidth. Though the peak-to-trough ratios for the probe beam resonances are approximately equal to those of the residual FP modes of the FP laser spectrum, the magnitude of the conjugate beam resonances correspond to the square of these amplitudes.
The optical powers of the pump, probe and NDFWM
conjugate beams (to both longer and shorter wavelengths) at the peak of the resonances is shown in Figure 5. The most important feature of the figure is the roll-off of the power of the short wavelength conjugate beam. For detunings of up to 0.9THz(7.2nm) the conjugate beam strength decreases at the rate of approximately lOdB/decade. Above 0.9THz (7.2nm) the conjugate beams strength decreases at the rate of approximately lOdb/decade. Above 0.9THz there is a much more rapid drop in optical power. The absolute power level of the conjugate beam is at least an order of magnitude higher than measured in similar experiments on travelling wave amplifiers for simila_ input powers. In fact, for detunings up to -0.6THz (4.8nm) the power of the conjugate beam at the output facet is higher than the injected power in the probe beam.
The solid line shows the theoretically predicted NDFWM
gain (arbitrary scale) given by:

gFW~(~)a I ~( Ps~ , ~NL l2 l-z~rR 1 -~

( 1 )where Ps,t is the gain saturation power of the amplifier and P is the total optical power, ~NL is the non-linear gain parameter, ~ is the pump-probe detuning, tR and r in are the characteristic times of the physical processes giving rise to the two terms, that is, carrier density 'population pulsations' and non-linear gain. rR is the effective recombination lifeline (including stimulated emission), and r in is the intraband relaxation time. The theoretical curve shown gave a good fit to the experimental data for a 16-well strained layer travelling wave amplifier under similar experimental conditions, with parameters rR=0.08ns and 2~L6~ 14 - ~

~in=. 5Ps- The curve gives a reasonable fit to the data for detunings up to 0.9THz, the relatively slow decay (-lOdB/decade) arising from the combination of the fast decay (20dB/decade) of the NDFNM due to population pulsations (~ l/TR), and the almost constant level of NDFWM from non-linear gain (~sl/~R).
The rapid decay of the conjugate signal for frequencies above 0.9THz is due to two effects: (1) the broadening of the resonance resulting from reduced modal gain, and (2) the dispersion of the mode index, resulting in a varying FP mode spacing. Since the enhancement in the conjugate beam power results from the coincidence of both the probe and conjugate beams with FP resonances, the latter effect results in the two beams not being at resonance simultaneously. This effect appears to be dominant, since effect (1) would result in a sharp reduction in the probe output power beyond 0.9THz detuning, which is not observed.
In order to quantify the enhancement in NDFWM
efficiency resulting from cavity resonances, the results described in the previous section will be compared with results on travelling wave amplifiers (TWAs) and DFB lasers.
For the TWAs, a pump and a probe beam were injected into a device which had been anti-reflection coated on both facets to s0.2%; the devices gave high single-pass gain (-20dB) with <2dB residual Fabry-Perot ripple. For the DFB, a single probe input was injected into the device, which was operated well above threshold, emitting >lOmW power.
- It is necessary, however, to compare the results in a way which removes the dependence on experimental details, e.g. input powers and single-pass gain . Since the power in the conjugate beam is, in 7eneral, described by the relation PF~PI2P2, where Pl, P2, PF~ are the optical powers of the pump, probe and FWM conjugate beams, coefficients ~out and ~in are defined for the purposes of comparison in the following way:
PFWII~ OUt ~OUt- ( Pl~ OUt ) P2~ OUt ( 2 ) PFWM~ OUt il jn- (P" in) P2~ in (3) where the subscripts 'out' and 'in' denote whether the power WO95/~653 PCT/GB94/00602 _ - 15 - ~6 is the output facet power or the coupled-in input power. ~in indicates the basic efficiency of a device for phase conjugation, through this will depend on the single-pass gain at which the device is operated. ~out gives a better indication of the intrinsic efficiency of each type of device, since this removes the dependence on single-pass gain, and therefore will more clearly show the effect of FP
cavity resonances. Table 1 shows the values of ~Ou~ and ~in for lT~z pump-probe detuning, for five measurements. Devices numbered 1, 2 and 3 are two facet anti-reflection coated amplifiers, device 4 is a DFB laser, and device 5 is a Fabry-Perot laser. (In all the measurements, the weaker probe beam was to longer wavelength of the pump beam).
Type Coupled Input ~0ut/mw2) (~i n / mw Powers (dB) (dB) Pl(dBm) P2(dBm) 1 2FC Amplifier -4.5 -9.2 -62.2 -14.2 2 2FC Amplifier -6.1 -10.1 -56.6 -2.6 3 2FC Amplifier -7.7 -12.2 -56.1 -2.1 4 3-Section DFB --- -60.7 -----9.3 Uncoated, -6.7 -30.7 +7.7 Injection-Locked The most remarkable feature of the table is that, while the values of ~out for the TWA and DFB measurements are relatively uniform, the value for the FP device at resonance is -30dB greater. This indicates that the effect of the FP
cavity is to give roughly three orders of magnitude enhancement in the NDFWM efficiency. There is considerably less difference in the values of ~in owing to the much lower gain in the F-P device, though as expected, there is less uniformity for the TWA and DFB results.

WO9S/~C53 PCT/GB94/~602 2 ~65 S 6 ~ ~ 16 -The results shown in Figure 4 reveal that the resonance enhancement in the NDFWM occurs over a narrow bandwidth, and this imposes a severe limitation on the use of the effect, both with regard to the maximum bit rates and to the ease of use. The output intensities of the pump, probe and conjugate beam (short wavelength) for a small range of detunings around the resonance are shown in Figure 6 for ta) the 5th resonance and (b) the 14th resonance. The experimental points for the probe and conjugate beams are fitted using the following Airy-like functions:
Ipr = Ip~o {[1-RG]2 + 4RGsin2(~k.L)}l (4) IF~ = IF~O ~[1-RGl2 + 4RGsin2(~k.L)}~Z (5) where RG=~(R~R2).exp(gL) and Rl,R2 are the facet reflectivities, g is the single-pass gain and L is the device length. ~k is the wavevector detuning from the FP resonance, and ~k.L=~(~f/~fFsR) where Af is the frequency detuning and is the free spectral range of the FP modes. Equations (4) and (5) are obtained assuming equal, uniform modal gain and effective index for probe and conjugate beams, and uniform pump power.
The parameter RG indicates the degree of feedback within the Fabry-Perot cavity, and in particular the magnitude of the gain ripple (i.e. ratio of the maximum to minimum gain over one cavity mode) in the amplifier is given by Gain Ripple = (l+RG)2 ( l-RG)Z
In both figures, the probe and conjugate beam resonance lineshapes were fitted using the same value of RG
(the only variable parameter, apart from the peak intensity), and the measured value of 82.4GHz was used for ~fF5R. The full-width at half maximum intensity (FWHM) for the probe and conjugate signals was found to be 4.3GHz and 2.8GHz respectively for the 5th resonance; the resonance bandwidth for the 14th resonance was substantially broader, with FWHM
values of 8.2GHz and 5.2GHz for the probe and conjugate signals respectively. For the 14th resonance, there is also _ - 17 - 21 6 ~ 56g significant difference of 4-SGHz in the resonance peak positions for the probe and conjugate signals, which support the conclusion drawn previously that the modal dispersion degrades the cavity enhancement at detunings of 21THz.
The narrow bandwidth of the resonance enhancement clearly places a considerable restriction on the usefulness of the effect. Equation (5) shows, however, that there is a trade-off between the resonance bandwidth and the magnitude of the enhancement, and Figure 7 shows the dependence of the 10 peak resonance enhancement and of the resonance FWHM (as a fraction of ~fF5R) on the gain ripple. The point where gain ripple =0 corresponds to the case of a TWA with gain g. The figure shows that, in order to obtain a substantial enhancement, say>10, the resonance linewidth would need to be less than 0.18AfFSR (-15GHx for a 500~m device). In the present case, ~f(FWHM)/~fFsR lies in the range 0.033-0.06, corresponding to a resonance enhancement of 250-2000, which is consistent with the value of deduced in the previous section.
The experiments described have shown that extremely large enhancements in the efficiency of wavelength translation of NDFWM may be obtained using cavity-enhancement. Under the experimental conditions, an increase of approximately three orders of magnitude was observed in the NDFWM efficiency, for modest pump powers, for pump-probe detunings of up to 0.9THz (9.2nm) phase conjugate.
The usefulness of the effect is, however, limited by the following considerations: (1) the bandwidth for injection-locking is small, typically a few GHz, and therefore requires high stability in the pump and mixing devices. In addition, with two optical inputs, there are regimes in which the injection-locking becomes unstable,when the device tries, in effect, to lock to two signals simultaneously. (2) The bandwidth for resonance enhancement is also small. In the measurement, this bandwidth was found to be as small as 2.8GHz (FWHM). There is a trade-off between the resonance bandwidth and the enhancement obtained, wo gs/~ 2 ~ 6 5 5 6 ~ 18 - PCT/GB94/~602 and it is predicted that to obtain a factor of 10 increase in the NDFWM efficiency (compared with that for a travelling wave amplifier) one would be restricted to a bandwidth of -lSGHz. This not only means that the wavelength of the input signal needs to be finely tunable and stable, but that the maximum bit rate for signals which are to be phase conjugated is limited to -15Gbit/s.
These problems can be overcome by using a semiconductor optical amplifier (such as a TWA) which has little cavity enhancement. The main difficulties then encountered lie in obtaining sufficient power and signal-to-background ratio in the phase conjugate signal. Since NDFWM
is highly non-linear, these two quantities are strongly dependent on the powers of pump and signal beams within the TWA. To determine the optimum working conditions, these two parameters were measured as a function of (a) the gain of the TWA, and (b) the optical input power.
Figure 12 shows the phase conjugate power (measured at the output facet) and the signal-to-background ratio (measured by optical spectrum analyser with O.lnm resolution) as a function of the chip gain, for constant input power of +4.8dBm (total fibre power, pump + signal). The phase conjugate power increases as the cube of the gain of the TWA, giving up to -l~dBm at high injection currents. The signal-to-background ration also increases strongly with the gain, but as the s~uare of the gain. At the highest gains, the ratio is close to 20dB. The signal-to-background increases less rapidly with the gain than the phase conjugate power owing to the linear dependence of the background spontaneous emission on the gain.
The dependence of the phase conjugate power and the signal-to-background ration on the input power is shown in Figure 13 for constant TWA injection current of 250mA (the ratio between pump and signal input power being held constant). Surprisingly, the phase con~ugate power level is quite insensitive to the input power. This, however, may be explained by the small change in the output power of the TWA

W095/~6~ 1 6 ~ 6~ PCT/GB94tO0602 ~ -- 19 --under strong saturation. The input power, however, doeæ have a strong effect on the signal-to-background ratio. This increases sharply with increasing input power, owing to the reduction in background spontaneous emission. This is an important consideration when attempting to minimise the noise introduced in the phase conjugation.
An embodiment of the present invention will now be described in which FWM in a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) is employed to compensate for dispersion in an optical communications system. With reference to Figure 8, a DFB
laser 1 is used as the transmitter, directly modulated with a 2.488~bit/s pseudo-random NRZ 2l5-1 pattern. The DFB laser 1 has a wavelength of As=1544.7nm. The bias and modulation of the DFB 1 were chosen to give good extinction ratio but, consequently, large chirp. The signal is combined at the transmitter end of the system with CW light from a pump laser 2, a long external cavity (LEC) laser operating at Ap=1543.lnm. The combined pump and signal is transmitted across 50km normal-dispersion single-mode fibre 3, with a dispersion of 17ps/nm.km at the signal wavelength. After amplification by an Erbium-doped fibre amplifier 4 (EDFA), the light was coupled into an SOA 5. The SOA is an etched-mesa buried hetrostructure device with an active layer of InGaAsP and both facets anti-reflection coated to less than 103 reflectivity. The SOA is operated at high injection current (300mA), but the gain is saturated by the injected light with less than ldB residual Fabry-Perot ripple. The phase-conjugate signal is generated by NDFWM within the SOA, with a wavelength given by lpC={21p-l-As-l~-l = 1541.4nm. An optical bandpass filter 6 (1.3nm bandwidth) follows the SOA
and allows only the phase-conjugate signal to be transmitted.
This signal is amplified by a further EDFA 7 and further filtered by filter 8 (0.6nm filter) then transmitted across a second 50km length of single-mode fibre 9. The signal is detected using a PIN-FET optical receiver 10.
Spectra at the output of the SOA are shown in Figure 9, (a) with and (b) without the signal beam. With the signal WO95/~ PCT/GB94/00602 2i6S564 - 20 -and pump both present and with polarisations aligned, the phase-conjugate signal at 1541.4nm is generated, with the inverted spectral profile of the DFB signal beam. The fibre input powers of the pump and signal beams into the SOA are +2.7dBm and -4.ldBm respectively. The background to the spectra is from amplified spontaneous emission from both the EDFA and the SOA and causes a reduction in the signal-to-noise ratio. In order to maximise both the signal-to-noise ratio and conversion efficiency the SOA is operated with high gain and moderately high input optical power. Taking into account the coupling loss into and out of the SOA, the conversion efficiency of the phase conjugation (i.e. ratio of the power of the phase conjugate beam at the output facet to signal power coupled into the SOA) is +2.4dB, with a phase-conjugate of -5.6dBm at the output facet of the SOA. This conversion efficiency is at least 20dB greater than using DSF, and can be further increased by using a SOA with higher output power.
The effect of the dispersion compensation is clearly seen by comparison of the eye diagrams of Figure 10, where (a), (b) and (c) correspond to the back-to-back measurement, and 10Okm transmission without and with dispersion -compensation, respectively. The figures are all taken from the receiver output with -26dBm received optical power. The effects of fibre chromatic dispersion are evident from the distortion of the eye diagram (b), but the clean eye is completely recovered by the dispersion compensation (Figure (c) ).
Bit error rate (BER) measurements were performed for back-to-back transmission, and 100km transmission with and without dispersion compensation, and the results are shown in Figure 11. The back-to-back measurement, with the DFB signal directly into the receiver, shows a sensitivity of -27.5dBm.
The inclusion of a 0.6nm bandpass filter results in a power 3S penalty of less than 0.ldB. Transmission of the DFB signal over 100km without compensation (with a single EDFA at the transmitter) results in a considerable dispersion penalty, W095/03C~ PCT/GB941~602 - - 21 - ~ 5 and BERs as low as 109 could not be achieved. A similar eye diagram and BER characteristic were obtained using the arrangement of Figure 8, but with the filters tuned to transmit the DFB signal. With dispersion compensation, a dramatic improvement in the BER characteristic is seen, with 109 BER at -25.5dBm. The 2dB penalty results both from a reduction in extinction ratio and the introduction of signal-spontaneous beat noise, both arising from the introduction of amplifier spontaneous emission.
Thus chromatic dispersion compensation using optical phase conjugation in a semiconductor optical amplifier has removed the dispersion penalty in the transmission of a directly-modulated 2.5Gbit/s signal at 1.5~m over 100km of normal dispersion fibre. The efficiency of the phase conjugation is high at +2.4dB, despite the lack of cavity enhancement.
In an alternative embodiment the SOA 5 is provided by a DFB laser having a wavelength of 1543nm, thus allowing the pump laser 2 to be dispensed with. In this embodiment the 20 pump radiation at 1543nm is generated within the SOA 5.
Again, in order to maximise the efficiency of phase conjugation the SOA (in this case a DFB) is operated to provide maximum output power, i.e. with a high injection current, typically more than 10 times the threshold current.
Furthermore the average power of the optical signal injected into the SOA 5 is limited to a level such that the degree of gain modulation caused in the SOA is small, typically less than ldB.

Claims (18)

1. A method of compensating for dispersion in an optical communications system, the method comprising the steps of i) positioning a semiconductor optical amplifier between a first and a second length of optical fibre, ii) launching optical signals into the first length of optical fibre, iii) directing optical signals emerging from the first length of optical fibre into the semiconductor optical amplifier, iv) supplying optical pump radiation to the semiconductor optical amplifier so that the optical signals and the pump radiation interact within the semiconductor optical amplifier and generate the phase conjugate of the optical signals, and v) launching the phase conjugate optical signals into the second length of optical fibre.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the variation in gain ripple of the semiconductor optical amplifier with wavelength is less than 5dB.
3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2, wherein the reflectivity of the facets of the semiconductor optical amplifier is less than 10-3.
4. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the wavelength of the optical signals and the wavelength of the pump radiation differ by at least 1nm.
5. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the wavelength of the optical signals and the wavelength of the pump radiation differ by less than20nm.
6. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the gain of the semiconductor optical amplifier is saturated by the pump radiation.
7. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the semiconductor optical amplifier is operated with a high injection current density.
8. A method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the semiconductor optical amplifier is operated with an injection current density of more than 5kA/cm2.
9. A method as claimed in claim 7, wherein the semiconductor optical amplifier is operated with an injection current density of more than 10kA/cm2.
10. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the optical pump radiation supplied to the semiconductor optical amplifier is generated within the semiconductor optical amplifier.
11. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the first and second lengths of optical fibre have similar levels of dispersion at the operating wavelength of the optical communications system.
12. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the optical signals and the pump radiation are arranged to be co-progating within the semiconductor optical amplifier.
13. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the optical signals and the generated phase conjugate optical signals are co-propagating.
14. A method as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein in step iv) the optical pump radiation is supplied to the semiconductor optical amplifier from a pump source which is co-located with the semiconductor optical amplifier.
15. An optical communications system comprising a transmission path including a first optical fibre and a second optical fibre, an optical signal source for launching optical signals into the first optical fibre, an optical pump source for generating pump radiation, and a semiconductor optical amplifier having an inputfrom the first optical fibre and an output to the second optical fibre, wherein, in use, the semiconductor optical amplifier receives the pump radiation and the optical signals, after said signals have propagated through the first optical fibre, and generates phase conjugate replicas of the optical signals, which replicas are launched into the second optical fibre.
16. An optical communications system as claimed in claim 15, wherein both the semiconductor optical amplifier and the optical pump source are comprised bya semiconductor device having wavelength selective feedback means.
17. An optical communications system as claimed in claim 16, wherein said semiconductor device is a distributed feedback laser.
18. An optical communication system as claimed in claim 15, 16 or 17, further comprising an optical filter for filtering the remnant optical signals and pump radiation from the output of the semiconductor optical amplifier before it is launched into the second optical fibre.
CA002165564A 1993-07-20 1994-03-23 Dispersion compensation in an optical communications system Expired - Fee Related CA2165564C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB939315011A GB9315011D0 (en) 1993-07-20 1993-07-20 Dispersion compensation
GB9315011.8 1993-07-20
PCT/GB1994/000602 WO1995003653A1 (en) 1993-07-20 1994-03-23 Dispersion compensation in an optical communications system

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2165564A1 CA2165564A1 (en) 1995-02-02
CA2165564C true CA2165564C (en) 2000-05-16

Family

ID=10739117

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002165564A Expired - Fee Related CA2165564C (en) 1993-07-20 1994-03-23 Dispersion compensation in an optical communications system

Country Status (8)

Country Link
US (1) US5861970A (en)
EP (1) EP0710413B1 (en)
JP (1) JP3535164B2 (en)
AU (1) AU687384B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2165564C (en)
DE (1) DE69428359T2 (en)
GB (1) GB9315011D0 (en)
WO (1) WO1995003653A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (35)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP3506283B2 (en) * 1995-03-20 2004-03-15 富士通株式会社 Optical phase conjugator
JPH09199808A (en) * 1995-11-15 1997-07-31 Fujitsu Ltd Phase conjugating wave generating device, wave length conversion method, photodispersion compensating method and multiwavelength beam emitter
US7656578B2 (en) * 1997-03-21 2010-02-02 Imra America, Inc. Microchip-Yb fiber hybrid optical amplifier for micro-machining and marking
US20040036957A1 (en) * 1997-03-21 2004-02-26 Imra America, Inc. Microchip-Yb fiber hybrid optical amplifier for micro-machining and marking
US7576909B2 (en) 1998-07-16 2009-08-18 Imra America, Inc. Multimode amplifier for amplifying single mode light
US20020137890A1 (en) * 1997-03-31 2002-09-26 Genentech, Inc. Secreted and transmembrane polypeptides and nucleic acids encoding the same
US6055352A (en) * 1997-08-29 2000-04-25 Lucent Technologies Optical wavelength optimization for high speed WDM transmission system
JPH11202374A (en) * 1998-01-14 1999-07-30 Fujitsu Ltd Optical communication terminal station in wavelength multiplex system, optical signal transmission method and increase method for optical signals
US6798736B1 (en) * 1998-09-22 2004-09-28 Qualcomm Incorporated Method and apparatus for transmitting and receiving variable rate data
US6275512B1 (en) 1998-11-25 2001-08-14 Imra America, Inc. Mode-locked multimode fiber laser pulse source
US6310993B1 (en) 1999-12-22 2001-10-30 Avanex Corporation Method and apparatus for chromatic dispersion compensation and dispersion slope compensation in wavelength division multiplexed systems utilizing a channel separator and virtually imaged phased arrays
US6421167B1 (en) 2000-03-03 2002-07-16 General Dynamics Advanced Technology Systems, Inc. Multiple function bandwidth management systems
US6356684B1 (en) 2000-04-14 2002-03-12 General Dynamics Advanced Technology Systems, Inc. Adjustable optical fiber grating dispersion compensators
US7190705B2 (en) 2000-05-23 2007-03-13 Imra America. Inc. Pulsed laser sources
US7088756B2 (en) * 2003-07-25 2006-08-08 Imra America, Inc. Polarization maintaining dispersion controlled fiber laser source of ultrashort pulses
AU2001292467A1 (en) * 2000-10-24 2002-05-06 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Use of opa for switching and routing in wdm networks
US6522450B2 (en) 2001-04-25 2003-02-18 Corning Incorporated Loss-less tunable per-channel dispersion compensator
US7119325B2 (en) * 2003-01-27 2006-10-10 Bookham Technology Plc System and method for monitoring environmental effects using optical sensors
US7016583B2 (en) * 2003-01-31 2006-03-21 Corning Incorporated Dispersion management with phase conjugation
US6973105B2 (en) * 2003-03-21 2005-12-06 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Method and apparatus to enable adaptive equalization at high bandwidths when using single-mode VCSELs over multimode fibers
US7804864B2 (en) 2004-03-31 2010-09-28 Imra America, Inc. High power short pulse fiber laser
US7711013B2 (en) * 2004-03-31 2010-05-04 Imra America, Inc. Modular fiber-based chirped pulse amplification system
US7535630B2 (en) * 2006-06-08 2009-05-19 Industrial Technology Research Institute Broadband hybrid two-stage optical amplifier
US7702201B2 (en) * 2006-06-08 2010-04-20 Industrial Technology Research Institute Gain flattening utilizing a two-stage erbium-based amplifier
KR100921861B1 (en) * 2007-05-29 2009-10-13 광주과학기술원 All-optical Frequency Up-Converter, And All-optical Frequency Up-Converting Method in Radio Over Fiber System
US7745790B2 (en) * 2007-11-20 2010-06-29 Alcatel-Lucent Usa Inc. Negative refractive index device for generating terahertz or microwave radiation and method of operation thereof
JP4973559B2 (en) * 2008-03-24 2012-07-11 富士通株式会社 Optical amplifier and optical surge suppression method
US8808164B2 (en) * 2008-03-28 2014-08-19 Intuitive Surgical Operations, Inc. Controlling a robotic surgical tool with a display monitor
WO2010045339A2 (en) 2008-10-14 2010-04-22 Cornell University Apparatus for imparting phase shift to input waveform
CN102388298B (en) * 2009-02-05 2013-10-23 康奈尔大学 High-speed optical sampling by temporal stretching using four-wave mixing
GB2496214B (en) * 2011-11-01 2016-03-16 Fianium Ltd Amplifying optical device pumped or seeded with nonlinearly generated light
US8797519B2 (en) * 2012-09-28 2014-08-05 Corning Incorporated Method of measuring multi-mode fiber bandwidth through accessing one fiber end
US9923634B2 (en) * 2015-09-23 2018-03-20 Fujitsu Limited Harmonic generation and phase sensitive amplification using a bragg reflection waveguide
CN108051923B (en) * 2017-12-30 2020-12-11 武汉理工光科股份有限公司 Optical fiber multi-wavelength pulse light source for distributed Raman temperature measurement system
WO2023079646A1 (en) * 2021-11-04 2023-05-11 日本電信電話株式会社 Optical transmission system and optical transmission method

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4947134A (en) * 1987-10-30 1990-08-07 American Telephone And Telegraph Company Lightwave systems using optical amplifiers
US4979234A (en) * 1988-12-20 1990-12-18 At&T Bell Laboratories Saturated semiconductor laser amplifier for compensation of optical fibre dispersion
JP2626197B2 (en) * 1990-07-24 1997-07-02 日本電気株式会社 Frequency converter
US5365362A (en) * 1993-09-10 1994-11-15 At&T Bell Laboratories Ultra-high capacity non-soliton optical transmission using optical phase conjugation

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JP3535164B2 (en) 2004-06-07
DE69428359T2 (en) 2002-06-13
DE69428359D1 (en) 2001-10-25
WO1995003653A1 (en) 1995-02-02
GB9315011D0 (en) 1993-09-01
AU6286694A (en) 1995-02-20
AU687384B2 (en) 1998-02-26
US5861970A (en) 1999-01-19
EP0710413A1 (en) 1996-05-08
CA2165564A1 (en) 1995-02-02
EP0710413B1 (en) 2001-09-19
JPH09500504A (en) 1997-01-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA2165564C (en) Dispersion compensation in an optical communications system
EP1130704B1 (en) Optical communication system with Raman amplification
Devaux et al. Simple measurement of fiber dispersion and of chirp parameter of intensity modulated light emitter
Mohrdiek et al. 10-Gb/s standard fiber transmission using directly modulated 1.55-μm quantum-well DFB lasers
Inoue et al. Wavelength conversion experiment using fiber four-wave mixing
US5675428A (en) Optical communication apparatus
Hui et al. Modulation instability and its impact in multispan optical amplified IMDD systems: Theory and experiments
Sato et al. Chirp-compensated 40-GHz mode-locked lasers integrated with electroabsorption modulators and chirped gratings
US5754334A (en) Device for and method of modifying the spectral characteristics of optical signals
Swanson et al. 100-GHz soliton pulse train generation using soliton compression of two phase side bands from a single DFB laser
Feiste et al. 40 Gbit/s transmission over 434 km standard-fiber using polarisation independent mid-span spectral inversion
Futami et al. Low-noise multiwavelength transmitter using spectrum-sliced supercontinuum generated from a normal group-velocity dispersion fiber
EP0997013B1 (en) Optical transmission systems using spectral inversion for dispersion and non-linearities compensation
Sato et al. Actively mode-locked strained-InGaAsP multiquantum-well lasers integrated with electroabsorption modulators and distributed Bragg reflectors
Sato et al. Frequency range extension of actively mode-locked lasers integrated with electroabsorption modulators using chirped gratings
Bischoff et al. Bidirectional four-wave mixing in semiconductor optical amplifiers: theory and experiment
Schiess Comparison of dispersion compensation schemes including fiber nonlinearities
Clausen et al. 10-GHz return-to-zero pulse source tunable in wavelength with a single-or multiwavelength output based on four-wave mixing in a newly developed highly nonlinear fiber
Saktioto et al. Optical amplifiers for next-generation telecommunication
Brosson et al. Analytical expressions for the FM and AM responses of an integrated laser-modulator
Sanjoh et al. Wavelength chirping in wavelength conversion of 10 Gb/s signal with semiconductor laser converter
Buck Nonlinear effects in optical fibers
Iannone et al. Nanometer wavelength conversion of picosecond-optical pulses using cavity-enhanced highly nondegenerate four-wave mixing in semiconductor lasers
Simoyama et al. Cavity length dependence of wavelength conversion efficiency of four-wave mixing in lambda/4-shifted DFB laser
Kroh Semiconductor mode-locked laser for high-speed OTDM transmission

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
EEER Examination request
MKLA Lapsed