WO2003043147A1 - Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator - Google Patents

Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2003043147A1
WO2003043147A1 PCT/US2002/036846 US0236846W WO03043147A1 WO 2003043147 A1 WO2003043147 A1 WO 2003043147A1 US 0236846 W US0236846 W US 0236846W WO 03043147 A1 WO03043147 A1 WO 03043147A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
loop
tone
optical modulator
signal
tones
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2002/036846
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Keyvan Sayyah
Daniel Yap
Original Assignee
Hrl Laboratories Llc
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
Priority claimed from US10/116,799 external-priority patent/US6906309B2/en
Application filed by Hrl Laboratories Llc filed Critical Hrl Laboratories Llc
Publication of WO2003043147A1 publication Critical patent/WO2003043147A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F2/00Demodulating light; Transferring the modulation of modulated light; Frequency-changing of light
    • G02F2/002Demodulating light; Transferring the modulation of modulated light; Frequency-changing of light using optical mixing

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a method and apparatus for the generation of multitone RF lightwave oscillations using a photonic oscillator by temporarily injecting a RF electrical signal, either directly or by means of a lightwave signal, into a photonic oscillator at the vicinity of its main oscillation tone to excite other oscillation tones of the oscillator which may have been suppressed due to phase dispersions in its feedback loop.
  • the electrical injection or seeding signal may be removed while still retaining these tones.
  • the disclosed multitone photonic oscillator is a very useful device for generating a set of RF tones with low phase noise and controlled tone spacing. It is a very compact device that can be used in a variety of RF photonics and wireless applications requiring a number of simultaneous carriers. Previous means for generating such low phase noise multitone carriers with controllable frequency intervals typically required a set of low phase noise RF synthesizers that are both bulky and expensive.
  • LPI Low Probability of Intercept
  • the disclosed multitone photonic oscillator can also be used as a source of low phase noise carriers in commercial wireless or radio on fiber applications.
  • the use of a compact multi-tone carrier generator for the frequency multiplexed wireless transmission of information could significantly reduce the size and cost of the currently used bank of RF carrier synthesizers.
  • a photonic oscillator is disclosed by United States Patent 5,723,856 and by a related article by S. Yao and L. Maleki, IEEE J. Quantum Electronics, v. 32, n.7, pp. 1141 - 1149, 1996.
  • a photonic oscillator is disclosed (called an optoelectronic oscillator by the inventors) which includes a modulator, an optical feedback loop, a filter and a photodetector.
  • the aforementioned paper reports the generation of multiple tones achieved by enlarging the bandwidth of the filter and injection locking the oscillator to a continuously applied external RF signal.
  • the spacing of the tones in this case is equal to the frequency of the injected signal.
  • This method causes all of the oscillator modes (one tone per mode) to oscillate in phase. As a result the output signal is a series of pulses.
  • the present invention includes a modulator, an optical feedback loop, and a photodetector similar to the prior art. However, the present invention is different in that electrical injection locking is not used. Rather, injection seeding is used (to help initiate the generation of multiple tones) and the tone spacing is determined by the delay time of the optoelectronic feedback loop.
  • the tone spacing of the multi-tone oscillations is not determined by the injection seeding RF signal (which may be applied only temporarily), but rather by the delay time of the optoelectronic feedback loop.
  • the tone spacing is fixed and locked by the permanently injected signal.
  • an injection seeding RF signal is injected into the oscillator in order to help excite a multitude of oscillation modes that have been suppressed due to the phase dispersion in the feedback loop by fine tuning their electrical phase.
  • the injection seeding RF signal may be removed and the oscillations are maintained.
  • the external RF signal is permanently injected to lock the frequency interval of the oscillation modes. The prior art does not consider removal of the injection locking signal.
  • the multi-tones of the present invention need not be non coherent.
  • the output waveform is continuous in time.
  • the present invention provides a multi-tone photonic oscillator comprising a laser; an optical modulator coupled to the laser; a delay line and a photodetector coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; wherein the optical modulator is responsive to the delayed electrical signal for generating multiple tones where the frequency intervals of the multiple tones are a function of the amount of delay imposed by the delay line rather than being injection locked.
  • the present invention provides a method of generating a multitone RF lightwave comprising: a circulating laser supplied optical signal in closed loop, the loop including an optical modulator coupled to the laser; a delay line coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; and triggering multi-tone oscillators in said loop by momentarily injecting a RF signal into said loop.
  • the present invention provides a method of generating a multitone RF lightwave comprising: circulating laser supplied optical signal in closed loop, the loop including an optical modulator coupled to the laser; a delay line coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; and triggering multi-tone oscillators in said loop by adjusting the phase delay of the loop.
  • Figure 1(a) is a block diagram of a multi-tone photonic oscillator in accordance with the present invention
  • Figure 1 (b) is a block diagram of another embodiment of a multi-tone photonic oscillator in accordance with the present invention
  • Figure 1(c) is a block diagram of yet another embodiment of a multi-tone photonic oscillator in accordance with the present invention
  • Figure 1(d) is a phaser diagram of the injection-seeding signal (Ni), the amplifier output signal (Ni) and the resulting filter input signal (N 2 );
  • Figure 2 is a graph of the calculated dependence of normalized power of the photonic oscillator tones on the loop phase deviation from its nominal value as a function of several closed loop gain values
  • Figures 3(a) - 3(d) are graphs of a succession of RF spectra demonstrating the effect of injection seeding.
  • FIG. 1(a) A detailed block diagram of the multi-tone photonic oscillator 10 is shown in Figure 1(a) which includes a laser 12, an optical modulator 14 and a feedback loop.
  • the feedback loop includes a lightwave delay path 16, a photodetector 18, a low-noise electrical amplifier (L ⁇ A) 20, a coupler 22 or a coupler 15 and a RF bandpass filter 24.
  • the laser light which supplies the power for the oscillator, is modulated by the RF signal at the electrical input 14a of the optical modulator 14.
  • the modulated lightwave is sensed by the photodetector 18, whose electrical output 18a is fed back to the modulator 14 following amplification by L ⁇ A 20 and bandpass filtering by filter 24.
  • the bandpass filter 24 sets the bandwidth of the generated RF multitone comb spectrum.
  • the operating principal of the multi-tone oscillator is as follows. Random noise generated in the feedback loop modulates the laser light, which after propagating through the optical delay path 16 and being photodected by detector 18 is regeneratively fed back to the modulator 14. This constitutes a positive feedback if the open loop gain of the oscillator is greater than one. This amplification of the noise signal as a result of positive feedback occurs at frequency intervals ⁇ J equal to an integer multiple of the inverse of the loop delay time ( ⁇ ) , ⁇ f - ⁇ / ⁇ ⁇ w h ere ft 1S an integer. This results in potential multi-tone oscillations at the above frequency intervals.
  • the delay loop also acts as a storage medium to increase the quality factor (Q) of the multi-mode oscillator which is proportional to the square of the loop's delay ( where / is the oscillation frequency, and " is the input noise-to- signal ratio of the oscillator.
  • Q quality factor
  • P( ⁇ k ) is the output power of each tone at a frequency of ⁇ k
  • P 0 is the input noise power resulting in the oscillations
  • G is the closed loop gain of the oscillator
  • is the loop delay time
  • ⁇ ( ⁇ k ) is the total phase shift that each tone experiences in the feedback loop.
  • the dependence of the normalized oscillation power P( ⁇ k )/P 0 on the deviations of the phase shift from it nominal value is shown in Figure 2 for several values of the closed loop gain.
  • the nominal value of the phase shift results in the argument of the cosine term in Eq. (1) above to be an integer multiple of 2 ⁇ , resulting in maximum oscillation power.
  • G C L is the closed loop gain
  • N is the output noise power density
  • G A is the voltage p gain of the amplifier in the feedback loop
  • is the loop delay time
  • osc is the peak oscillation power.
  • the photonic oscillator in some occasions operates in a single predominant tone after turn on and not in a multi-tone mode as expected.
  • an electrical seeding signal via an electronic coupler 22
  • an optical seeding signal via an optical coupler 15
  • the generation of multi-tones can be initiated.
  • the electronic coupler 22 is optional.
  • the optical coupler 15 is optional.
  • the seeding signal may be turned off. If an optical seeding signal is used, it may be conveniently injected for a short period of time by momentarily closing an optical switch 26 at an input of the optical coupler 15. If instead an electrical seeding signal is used, it may be conveniently injected for a short period of time by momentarily closing an electronic switch 28 at the input to the electronic coupler 22.
  • a RF output signal of the photonic oscillator is available in electronic form at an output of the coupler 22 and a RF signal in optical form is available at the output of the optical modulator 14.
  • Figure 1(b) The embodiment of Figure 1(b) is quite similar to that of Figure 1(a).
  • the function of coupler 22 of Figure 1 (a) is assumed by an electronic combiner 21 and an optional splitter 23.
  • the electrical seeding signal may be conveniently injected for a short period of time by momentarily closing an electronic switch 28 at the input to the electronic combiner 21.
  • a RF output signal is available in electronic form at an output of splitter 23 and a RF signal in optical form is available at the output of the optical modulator 14.
  • the otherwise suppressed multi-tones can be excited by injecting a temporary RF seeding signal into the photonic oscillator 10 as has been discussed with reference to the embodiments of Figures 1(a) and 1(b).
  • the injected signal can be an electronic RF signal or an optic RF signal, as desired.
  • the effect of this RF signal is equivalent to that of the electrical phase shifter 22a in the feedback loop as discussed with reference to the embodiment of Figure 1(c).
  • Figure 1(d) is a phaser diagram showing the relationship between the magnitude and phase angle of the signals at the output of the amplifier (Ni), the input of the filter (V 2 ), and the injected signal (V,), where the injected signal is injected between the amplifier 20 and the filter 24.
  • N 2 Ni + N t . From the phaser diagram of Figure 1(d), it can be readily shown that V 2 is phase shifted from Ni by the following relationship:
  • ⁇ 2 is the induced phase shift between the signals at the input of the filter (V 2 ) and the output of the amplifier (Vi)
  • is the phase shift of the amplifier output signal relative to the injected signal (Ni).
  • V, « Ni small injected signals
  • Figures 3(a)-3(d) show a succession of RF spectra demonstrating the effect of the RF seeding signal in exciting the oscillation tones adjacent to the single dominant tone.
  • Figure 3(a) shows a main oscillation tone of about 15 dBm at a frequency of about 4.1636 GHz and two suppressed tones ( ⁇ 60 dB) separated about 1.8 MHz from this tone at the two extremes of the spectrum. Also shown in this spectrum are the injected signal (-12 dBm) at about 0.7 MHz above the main tone and other weaker mixing signals between the injecting signal and the main tone.
  • Figure 3(b) shows the same spectrum except for a slight increase in the injection signal frequency.
  • Figure 3(c) shows that a further increase in the frequency of the injection signal results in a strong excitation of the 2 oscillator modes mentioned above in which these tones acquire power levels of about 10 and 0 dBm while the power level of the previously predominant tone decreases to below 10 dBm. This indicates that the overall output power of the photonic oscillator is now shared among many tones, hence decreasing the power level of the previously predominant tone.
  • Figure 3(d) shows the same condition as in Figure 3(c) with the exception that the injected seeding signal is completely removed while the three oscillation tones are still maintained. The succession of these figures demonstrate the key point of this invention.
  • this technique requires spanning the frequency of the injection signal in the vicinity of the predominant tone between the adjacent and suppressed oscillation tones.
  • the excitation of these suppressed tones occurs at an injection seeding frequency where the frequency dependent phase changes resulting from the RF injection process are sufficient to correct for any potential phase deviation due to phase dispersion in the feedback loop.
  • a very small phase deviation of up to 0.1° can result in more than 50 dB suppression in the power level of the oscillation tones.
  • a RF seeding signal is injected into a photonic oscillator at a frequency of the first suppressed tone adjacent and below the single predominant tone.
  • the injection signal is then spanned in frequency up to the second suppressed tone adj acent and above the predominant tone and the power level of one of the suppressed tones continuously monitored. Once this power level jumps above 5-6 orders of magnitude, the frequency spanning is stopped and the RF injection-seeding signal is removed. At this point, multi-tone oscillations in the photonic oscillator have been excited.
  • Another advantage of this invention is in the remote optical injection seeding of the photonic oscillator in order to excite multi-tone oscillations. This can be accomplished by first modulating an optical carrier with the injection-seeding RF signal remotely, and then transporting this RF-lightwave signal to the optical coupler 15 that feeds the photodetector 18 in the feedback loop of the photonic oscillator 10 as shown in Figure 1(a).
  • the amplifier 20 is an electronic amplifier in the embodiment s of Figures 1(a) - 1(c). Alternatively, an optical amplifier could be utilized.

Abstract

A multi-tone photonic oscillator comprises a laser; an optical modulator coupled to the laser; and a delay line and a photodetector coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; wherein the optical modulator being responsive to the delayed electrical signal for generating multiple tones where the frequency intervals of the tones is a function of the amount of delay imposed by the delay line.

Description

Injection-seeding of a Multi-tone Photonic Oscillator
Cross Reference to Related Applications
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application number 60/332,371 filed November 15, 2001 for an "Injection-seeding of a Multi-tone Photonic Oscillator" by Daniel Yap and Key van Sayyah, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
This application is related to a patent application entitled "Agile RF-Lightwave Waveform Synthesis and an Optical Multi-Tone Amplitude Modulator" (Attorney Docket 618837-7) bearing serial number 60/332,367 and filed November 15, 2001, and its corresponding non- provisional application bearing serial number 10/116,801 and filed on April 5, 2002, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by this reference. These related applications are owned by the assignee of this present application.
This application is related to a provisional patent application entitled "Agile Spread Waveform Generator" bearing serial number 60/332,372 and filed November 15, 2001, and its corresponding non-provisional application bearing serial number 10/116,829 and filed on April 5, 2002, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by this reference. These related applications are owned by the assignee of this present application.
This application is also related to a patent application entitled "Remotely Locatable RF Power Amplification System" bearing serial number 60/332,368 and filed November 15, 2001, and its corresponding non-provisional application bearing serial number 10/116,854 and filed on April 5, 2002, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated herein by this reference. These related applications are owned by the assignee of this present application.
Technical Field
This invention relates to a method and apparatus for the generation of multitone RF lightwave oscillations using a photonic oscillator by temporarily injecting a RF electrical signal, either directly or by means of a lightwave signal, into a photonic oscillator at the vicinity of its main oscillation tone to excite other oscillation tones of the oscillator which may have been suppressed due to phase dispersions in its feedback loop. Once the multitone oscillations have been established, the electrical injection or seeding signal may be removed while still retaining these tones.
Background
The disclosed multitone photonic oscillator is a very useful device for generating a set of RF tones with low phase noise and controlled tone spacing. It is a very compact device that can be used in a variety of RF photonics and wireless applications requiring a number of simultaneous carriers. Previous means for generating such low phase noise multitone carriers with controllable frequency intervals typically required a set of low phase noise RF synthesizers that are both bulky and expensive.
The generation of low phase noise multitone RF carriers is essential in a variety of radar and communications applications. Low Probability of Intercept (LPI) radar and communication systems use a set of rapidly frequency shifted low phase noise RF carriers as transmit waveforms in order to spread the information spectrum and hence reduce the probability of intercept. The presently disclosed device would be quite useful in such an application.
The disclosed multitone photonic oscillator can also be used as a source of low phase noise carriers in commercial wireless or radio on fiber applications. In these applications, the use of a compact multi-tone carrier generator for the frequency multiplexed wireless transmission of information could significantly reduce the size and cost of the currently used bank of RF carrier synthesizers.
Most prior art optoelectronic oscillators only generate a single tone. A photonic oscillator is disclosed by United States Patent 5,723,856 and by a related article by S. Yao and L. Maleki, IEEE J. Quantum Electronics, v. 32, n.7, pp. 1141 - 1149, 1996. In this patent and the related article, a photonic oscillator is disclosed (called an optoelectronic oscillator by the inventors) which includes a modulator, an optical feedback loop, a filter and a photodetector. The aforementioned paper reports the generation of multiple tones achieved by enlarging the bandwidth of the filter and injection locking the oscillator to a continuously applied external RF signal. The spacing of the tones in this case is equal to the frequency of the injected signal. This method causes all of the oscillator modes (one tone per mode) to oscillate in phase. As a result the output signal is a series of pulses.
The present invention includes a modulator, an optical feedback loop, and a photodetector similar to the prior art. However, the present invention is different in that electrical injection locking is not used. Rather, injection seeding is used (to help initiate the generation of multiple tones) and the tone spacing is determined by the delay time of the optoelectronic feedback loop.
There are significant differences between the present invention described herein and this prior art:
1. In the present invention, the tone spacing of the multi-tone oscillations is not determined by the injection seeding RF signal (which may be applied only temporarily), but rather by the delay time of the optoelectronic feedback loop. In this prior art, the tone spacing is fixed and locked by the permanently injected signal.
2. In the present invention an injection seeding RF signal is injected into the oscillator in order to help excite a multitude of oscillation modes that have been suppressed due to the phase dispersion in the feedback loop by fine tuning their electrical phase. Once multitone oscillations have been established, the injection seeding RF signal may be removed and the oscillations are maintained. In the prior art, the external RF signal is permanently injected to lock the frequency interval of the oscillation modes. The prior art does not consider removal of the injection locking signal.
3. In contrast to this prior art in which the multiple tones are phase locked due to the injection locking signal hence resulting in a pulsed waveform in the time domain, the multi-tones of the present invention need not be non coherent. Thus, the output waveform is continuous in time. Brief Description
In one aspect, the present invention provides a multi-tone photonic oscillator comprising a laser; an optical modulator coupled to the laser; a delay line and a photodetector coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; wherein the optical modulator is responsive to the delayed electrical signal for generating multiple tones where the frequency intervals of the multiple tones are a function of the amount of delay imposed by the delay line rather than being injection locked.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a method of generating a multitone RF lightwave comprising: a circulating laser supplied optical signal in closed loop, the loop including an optical modulator coupled to the laser; a delay line coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; and triggering multi-tone oscillators in said loop by momentarily injecting a RF signal into said loop.
In yet another aspect, the present invention provides a method of generating a multitone RF lightwave comprising: circulating laser supplied optical signal in closed loop, the loop including an optical modulator coupled to the laser; a delay line coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of the output of the optical modulator; and triggering multi-tone oscillators in said loop by adjusting the phase delay of the loop.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1(a) is a block diagram of a multi-tone photonic oscillator in accordance with the present invention; Figure 1 (b) is a block diagram of another embodiment of a multi-tone photonic oscillator in accordance with the present invention; Figure 1(c) is a block diagram of yet another embodiment of a multi-tone photonic oscillator in accordance with the present invention;
Figure 1(d) is a phaser diagram of the injection-seeding signal (Ni), the amplifier output signal (Ni) and the resulting filter input signal (N2);
Figure 2 is a graph of the calculated dependence of normalized power of the photonic oscillator tones on the loop phase deviation from its nominal value as a function of several closed loop gain values; and
Figures 3(a) - 3(d) are graphs of a succession of RF spectra demonstrating the effect of injection seeding.
Detailed Description
A detailed block diagram of the multi-tone photonic oscillator 10 is shown in Figure 1(a) which includes a laser 12, an optical modulator 14 and a feedback loop. The feedback loop includes a lightwave delay path 16, a photodetector 18, a low-noise electrical amplifier (LΝA) 20, a coupler 22 or a coupler 15 and a RF bandpass filter 24. The laser light, which supplies the power for the oscillator, is modulated by the RF signal at the electrical input 14a of the optical modulator 14. The modulated lightwave is sensed by the photodetector 18, whose electrical output 18a is fed back to the modulator 14 following amplification by LΝA 20 and bandpass filtering by filter 24. The bandpass filter 24 sets the bandwidth of the generated RF multitone comb spectrum.
The operating principal of the multi-tone oscillator is as follows. Random noise generated in the feedback loop modulates the laser light, which after propagating through the optical delay path 16 and being photodected by detector 18 is regeneratively fed back to the modulator 14. This constitutes a positive feedback if the open loop gain of the oscillator is greater than one. This amplification of the noise signal as a result of positive feedback occurs at frequency intervals ^J equal to an integer multiple of the inverse of the loop delay time (τ), Δf - κ /τ^ where ft 1S an integer. This results in potential multi-tone oscillations at the above frequency intervals. The delay loop also acts as a storage medium to increase the quality factor (Q) of the multi-mode oscillator which is proportional to the square of the loop's delay (
Figure imgf000008_0001
where / is the oscillation frequency, and " is the input noise-to- signal ratio of the oscillator. Thus, the oscillator phase noise S(/'), which is inversely proportional to this quality factor ^ ) = ό / L() (tj) J where /' is the offset frequency, decreases quadratically as the optical delay in the loop is increased.
It has been experimentally observed that multi-tone oscillations are not always present when the photonic oscillator is turned on. In some occasions, only a predominant single tone is present although the overall passband and the open loop gain of the feedback loop allows the other oscillations tones with a tone spacing of J ~ , as described above. One possible explanation for the lack of excitation of the other multi-tones is the phase dispersion present in the feedback loop at the time the photonic oscillator is turned on. The power spectrum of the oscillation tones in the photonic oscillator is given below as:
P(ωk) = P0 /[l + G2 - 2Gcos[u)kτ + φ(ωk)]] (1)
Where P(ωk ) is the output power of each tone at a frequency of ωk , P0 is the input noise power resulting in the oscillations, G is the closed loop gain of the oscillator, τ is the loop delay time and φ(ωk)is the total phase shift that each tone experiences in the feedback loop. The dependence of the normalized oscillation power P(ωk)/P0 on the deviations of the phase shift from it nominal value is shown in Figure 2 for several values of the closed loop gain. The nominal value of the phase shift results in the argument of the cosine term in Eq. (1) above to be an integer multiple of 2π, resulting in maximum oscillation power. It is clear from this figure that for close loop gain values very close to one (1 ~ 10 to 1 - 10 J^ which are very reasonable values as discussed below, the normalized oscillation power drops at least 5 orders or magnitude ( _ 50 dB) ^^ a phase deviation of up to 0.1 ° from the theoretical value which results in maximum oscillation power. This calculation demonstrates that a very- small phase deviation from the optimum value results in a significant suppression of the output power in the oscillation tones.
The closed loop gain of the photonic oscillator is given by the following relationship: Gr CLτ = l - p " M NG AΔ /(τP osc )y (<γχχ
Where GCL is the closed loop gain, N is the output noise power density, GA is the voltage p gain of the amplifier in the feedback loop, τ is the loop delay time and oscis the peak oscillation power. For typical values of pn ~ 10"17mW I Hz, Posc ~ lOrnW(lOdBrn), GA ~ 10, and τ ~ 106s, the closed loop gain of the photonic oscillator is GCL ~ 1-10"10. In the calculations shown above for the sensitivity of the output power of each tone of the oscillator on phase deviations shown above, closed loop gains in the range of 1-10"5 to 1-10"7 have been estimated which result in a less sensitive phase deviation dependence compared to the value of 1-10"10 estimated here. Thus, the prediction made above that the oscillation power drops by at least 5 orders of magnitude drop with a phase deviation of up to only 0.1° from optimum values is justified.
In practice, the photonic oscillator in some occasions operates in a single predominant tone after turn on and not in a multi-tone mode as expected. By inserting either an electrical seeding signal (via an electronic coupler 22) or an optical seeding signal (via an optical coupler 15), the generation of multi-tones can be initiated. If optical seeding is used, the electronic coupler 22 is optional. On the other hand, if electrical seeding is used, the optical coupler 15 is optional.
After the tones are initiated (typically in a fraction of a second), the seeding signal may be turned off. If an optical seeding signal is used, it may be conveniently injected for a short period of time by momentarily closing an optical switch 26 at an input of the optical coupler 15. If instead an electrical seeding signal is used, it may be conveniently injected for a short period of time by momentarily closing an electronic switch 28 at the input to the electronic coupler 22. A RF output signal of the photonic oscillator is available in electronic form at an output of the coupler 22 and a RF signal in optical form is available at the output of the optical modulator 14.
The embodiment of Figure 1(b) is quite similar to that of Figure 1(a). In Figure 1(b) the function of coupler 22 of Figure 1 (a) is assumed by an electronic combiner 21 and an optional splitter 23. In this embodiment the electrical seeding signal may be conveniently injected for a short period of time by momentarily closing an electronic switch 28 at the input to the electronic combiner 21. A RF output signal is available in electronic form at an output of splitter 23 and a RF signal in optical form is available at the output of the optical modulator 14.
Turning now to the embodiment of Figure 1(c), by inserting an optional electrical phase shifter 22a in the feedback loop and adjusting the phase value thereof, multi-tones that were not previously present can be excited. This qualitatively confirms the above discussion that the excitation of the multi-modes is phase sensitive. In fact, when the photonic oscillator operates in a single predominant tone, the other tones are still present but at much suppressed power of 50-60 dB below the single tone.
The otherwise suppressed multi-tones can be excited by injecting a temporary RF seeding signal into the photonic oscillator 10 as has been discussed with reference to the embodiments of Figures 1(a) and 1(b). The injected signal can be an electronic RF signal or an optic RF signal, as desired. The effect of this RF signal is equivalent to that of the electrical phase shifter 22a in the feedback loop as discussed with reference to the embodiment of Figure 1(c).
Figure 1(d) is a phaser diagram showing the relationship between the magnitude and phase angle of the signals at the output of the amplifier (Ni), the input of the filter (V2), and the injected signal (V,), where the injected signal is injected between the amplifier 20 and the filter 24. In a phaser relationship, N2 = Ni + Nt. From the phaser diagram of Figure 1(d), it can be readily shown that V2 is phase shifted from Ni by the following relationship:
φ2 - tan-1 [(Vιsinθ)/V1]
Where φ2 is the induced phase shift between the signals at the input of the filter (V2) and the output of the amplifier (Vi), and θ is the phase shift of the amplifier output signal relative to the injected signal (Ni). The above relationship is true for small injected signals (V, « Ni). Thus, the injected RF signal induces a phase shift in the feedback loop of the photonic oscillator proportional to the magnitude of this signal that is enough to phase tune a number of tones in the oscillator, and hence excite their oscillation. In the absence of injection
2 = 0) the signals at the output of the amplifier and the input of the filter become the same.
Figures 3(a)-3(d) show a succession of RF spectra demonstrating the effect of the RF seeding signal in exciting the oscillation tones adjacent to the single dominant tone. Figure 3(a) shows a main oscillation tone of about 15 dBm at a frequency of about 4.1636 GHz and two suppressed tones (~60 dB) separated about 1.8 MHz from this tone at the two extremes of the spectrum. Also shown in this spectrum are the injected signal (-12 dBm) at about 0.7 MHz above the main tone and other weaker mixing signals between the injecting signal and the main tone. Figure 3(b) shows the same spectrum except for a slight increase in the injection signal frequency. Figure 3(c) shows that a further increase in the frequency of the injection signal results in a strong excitation of the 2 oscillator modes mentioned above in which these tones acquire power levels of about 10 and 0 dBm while the power level of the previously predominant tone decreases to below 10 dBm. This indicates that the overall output power of the photonic oscillator is now shared among many tones, hence decreasing the power level of the previously predominant tone. Figure 3(d) shows the same condition as in Figure 3(c) with the exception that the injected seeding signal is completely removed while the three oscillation tones are still maintained. The succession of these figures demonstrate the key point of this invention.
It has been found that this technique requires spanning the frequency of the injection signal in the vicinity of the predominant tone between the adjacent and suppressed oscillation tones. The excitation of these suppressed tones occurs at an injection seeding frequency where the frequency dependent phase changes resulting from the RF injection process are sufficient to correct for any potential phase deviation due to phase dispersion in the feedback loop. As shown in Figure 2, a very small phase deviation of up to 0.1° can result in more than 50 dB suppression in the power level of the oscillation tones. Once this excitation of the oscillation tones as a result of their fine phase tuning occurs, the removal of the RF seeding signal does not result in a renewed suppression of the tones just excited. This indicates that this process is not reversible and once the tones are excited by their phase adjustment they are locked in and the removal of the phase change inducing mechanism does not affect them. For a practical implementation of this technique, a RF seeding signal is injected into a photonic oscillator at a frequency of the first suppressed tone adjacent and below the single predominant tone. The injection signal is then spanned in frequency up to the second suppressed tone adj acent and above the predominant tone and the power level of one of the suppressed tones continuously monitored. Once this power level jumps above 5-6 orders of magnitude, the frequency spanning is stopped and the RF injection-seeding signal is removed. At this point, multi-tone oscillations in the photonic oscillator have been excited.
Finally, another advantage of this invention is in the remote optical injection seeding of the photonic oscillator in order to excite multi-tone oscillations. This can be accomplished by first modulating an optical carrier with the injection-seeding RF signal remotely, and then transporting this RF-lightwave signal to the optical coupler 15 that feeds the photodetector 18 in the feedback loop of the photonic oscillator 10 as shown in Figure 1(a).
The amplifier 20 is an electronic amplifier in the embodiment s of Figures 1(a) - 1(c). Alternatively, an optical amplifier could be utilized.
Having described the invention in connection with a preferred embodiment, modification will now certainly suggest itself to those skilled in the art. As such the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments except as required by the appended claims.

Claims

1. A multi-tone photonic oscillator comprising:
(a) a laser;
(b) an optical modulator coupled to the laser;
(c) a delay line and a photodetector coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of a signal output from the optical modulator;
(d) the optical modulator being responsive to the delayed electrical signal for generating multiple tones where frequency intervals of the tones are a function of the delay imposed by the delay line.
2. The multi-tone photonic oscillator of claim 1 wherein the delay line and the photodetector form a portion of a feedback loop, the feedback loop also including an amplifier to ensure that the feedback loop has an open loop gain greater than unity.
3. The multi-tone photonic oscillator of claim 2 further including a RF injection port for temporarily injecting RF energy into said feedback loop.
4. The multi-tone photonic oscillator of claim 3 wherein the RF injection port is an optical coupler.
5. The multi-tone photonic oscillator of claim 3 wherein the RF injection port is an electronic coupler.
6. • The multi-tone photonic oscillator of claim 3 wherein the RF injection port is an electronic combiner.
7. The multi-tone photonic oscillator of any one of claims 2 to 6 further including a phase shifter for adjusting phase delay in said feedback loop to thereby excite otherwise suppressed multiple tones.
8. A method of generating a RF lightwave having multiple tones, the method comprising: circulating a laser injected optical signal in a closed loop, the loop including an optical modulator coupled to the laser, a delay line coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of a signal output by the optical modulator; and triggering multiple tone oscillations in said loop by momentarily injecting a RF signal into said loop.
9. A method of generating a multitone RF lightwave having multiple tones, the method comprising: circulating a laser injected optical signal in a closed loop having a phase delay, the loop including an optical modulator coupled to a laser, a delay line coupled to the optical modulator for generating a delayed electrical signal representation of a signal output by the optical modulator; and triggering multi-tone oscillations in said loop by adjusting the phase delay of said loop.
10. The method according to claim 8 or claim 9 further including a step of adjusting the delay imposed by the delay line as a function of desired frequency intervals of the tones in the RF lightwave.
11. The method according to any one of claims 8 to 10 further including the step of adding an amplifier to the loop to ensure that the loop has an open loop gain greater than unity.
PCT/US2002/036846 2001-11-15 2002-11-15 Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator WO2003043147A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US60/332,371 2001-11-15
US10/116,799 2002-04-05
US10/116,799 US6906309B2 (en) 2001-11-15 2002-04-05 Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2003043147A1 true WO2003043147A1 (en) 2003-05-22

Family

ID=22369293

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2002/036846 WO2003043147A1 (en) 2001-11-15 2002-11-15 Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator

Country Status (1)

Country Link
WO (1) WO2003043147A1 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7499653B2 (en) 2003-07-14 2009-03-03 Hrl Laboratories, Llc Multiple wavelength photonic oscillator
US7650080B2 (en) 2001-11-15 2010-01-19 Hrl Laboratories, Llc Method and apparatus for waveform generation
US7822082B2 (en) 2004-01-27 2010-10-26 Hrl Laboratories, Llc Wavelength reconfigurable laser transmitter tuned via the resonance passbands of a tunable microresonator

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5383198A (en) * 1993-10-25 1995-01-17 Cornell Research Foundation, Inc. Self-starting mode-locked ring cavity laser
US5577057A (en) * 1991-03-01 1996-11-19 Telstra Corporation Limited Modelocked lasers
US5723856A (en) * 1995-08-01 1998-03-03 California Institute Of Technology Opto-electronic oscillator having a positive feedback with an open loop gain greater than one
US5917179A (en) * 1997-05-12 1999-06-29 California Institute Of Technology Brillouin opto-electronic oscillators

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5577057A (en) * 1991-03-01 1996-11-19 Telstra Corporation Limited Modelocked lasers
US5383198A (en) * 1993-10-25 1995-01-17 Cornell Research Foundation, Inc. Self-starting mode-locked ring cavity laser
US5723856A (en) * 1995-08-01 1998-03-03 California Institute Of Technology Opto-electronic oscillator having a positive feedback with an open loop gain greater than one
US5917179A (en) * 1997-05-12 1999-06-29 California Institute Of Technology Brillouin opto-electronic oscillators

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
YAO X S ET AL: "High frequency optical subcarrier generator", ELECTRONICS LETTERS, IEE STEVENAGE, GB, vol. 30, no. 18, 1 September 1994 (1994-09-01), pages 1525 - 1526, XP006001026, ISSN: 0013-5194 *
YAO X S ET AL: "OPTOELECTRONIC OSCILLATOR FOR PHOTONIC SYSTEMS", IEEE JOURNAL OF QUANTUM ELECTRONICS, IEEE INC. NEW YORK, US, vol. 32, no. 7, 1 July 1996 (1996-07-01), pages 1141 - 1149, XP000598841, ISSN: 0018-9197 *

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7650080B2 (en) 2001-11-15 2010-01-19 Hrl Laboratories, Llc Method and apparatus for waveform generation
US7499653B2 (en) 2003-07-14 2009-03-03 Hrl Laboratories, Llc Multiple wavelength photonic oscillator
US7822082B2 (en) 2004-01-27 2010-10-26 Hrl Laboratories, Llc Wavelength reconfigurable laser transmitter tuned via the resonance passbands of a tunable microresonator

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6906309B2 (en) Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator
US7457489B2 (en) Frequency tuning of photonic oscillator using amplifier bias voltage
US5777778A (en) Multi-Loop opto-electronic microwave oscillator with a wide tuning range
US5723856A (en) Opto-electronic oscillator having a positive feedback with an open loop gain greater than one
US8750717B1 (en) Method and apparatus for waveform generation
Yao et al. Multiloop optoelectronic oscillator
Yao et al. Optoelectronic oscillator for photonic systems
US7373088B2 (en) Agile spread waveform generator
US7085499B2 (en) Agile RF-lightwave waveform synthesis and an optical multi-tone amplitude modulator
US5929430A (en) Coupled opto-electronic oscillator
US8717657B2 (en) Optoelectronic oscillator using a high finesse etalon
US20010024317A1 (en) Optical pulse synthesis using brillouin selective sideband amplification
Ozdur et al. Low noise optically tunable opto-electronic oscillator with Fabry–Perot etalon
US20090245306A1 (en) High Performance Tunable Lasers Utilizing Optical Phase-Locked Loops
US5926492A (en) Laser pulse oscillator
CN111342332A (en) Active mode-locking photoelectric oscillator
Yao et al. A novel photonic oscillator
US20020063944A1 (en) Ultra-high speed optical wavelength converter apparatus for enabling simultaneous extraction of all optical clock signals
JP3204476B2 (en) Drive frequency mixing mode-locked laser device
Huang Loss-less pulse intensity repetition-rate multiplication using optical all-pass filtering
EP1600806A2 (en) Novel opto-electronic oscillators
WO2003043147A1 (en) Injection-seeding of a multi-tone photonic oscillator
JPH06318753A (en) Optical microwave generator
EP0842571B1 (en) Opto-electronic oscillator systems and their applications
Yu et al. Photonic microwave oscillator using mode-locked laser as the high Q resonator

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AE AG AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY BZ CA CH CN CO CR CU CZ DE DK DM DZ EC EE ES FI GB GD GE GH GM HR HU ID IL IN IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LC LK LR LS LT LU LV MA MD MG MK MN MW MX MZ NO NZ OM PH PL PT RO RU SC SD SE SG SI SK SL TJ TM TN TR TT TZ UA UG US UZ VC VN YU ZA ZM ZW

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): GH GM KE LS MW MZ SD SL SZ TZ UG ZM ZW AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE SK TR BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GQ GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase
NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: JP

WWW Wipo information: withdrawn in national office

Country of ref document: JP