WO2005084268A2 - Fm source and spectral reshaping element - Google Patents

Fm source and spectral reshaping element Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2005084268A2
WO2005084268A2 PCT/US2005/006412 US2005006412W WO2005084268A2 WO 2005084268 A2 WO2005084268 A2 WO 2005084268A2 US 2005006412 W US2005006412 W US 2005006412W WO 2005084268 A2 WO2005084268 A2 WO 2005084268A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
signal
ofthe
frequency
communication system
optical
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2005/006412
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2005084268A3 (en
Inventor
Daniel Mahgerefteh
Yasuhiro Matsui
Xueyan Zheng
Bart Johnson
Duncan Walker
Parviz Tayebati
Original Assignee
Azna 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
Application filed by Azna Llc filed Critical Azna Llc
Priority to JP2007500803A priority Critical patent/JP4584304B2/en
Priority to EP05724041.8A priority patent/EP1738504A4/en
Priority to CA002557150A priority patent/CA2557150A1/en
Priority to CN2005800127054A priority patent/CN101073210B/en
Publication of WO2005084268A2 publication Critical patent/WO2005084268A2/en
Publication of WO2005084268A3 publication Critical patent/WO2005084268A3/en

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
    • H04B10/25137Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to chromatic dispersion using pulse shaping at the transmitter, e.g. pre-chirping or dispersion supported transmission [DST]
    • 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
    • H04B10/50Transmitters
    • H04B10/501Structural aspects
    • H04B10/503Laser transmitters
    • H04B10/504Laser transmitters using direct modulation
    • 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
    • H04B10/50Transmitters
    • H04B10/501Structural aspects
    • H04B10/503Laser transmitters
    • H04B10/505Laser transmitters using external modulation
    • 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
    • H04B10/50Transmitters
    • H04B10/516Details of coding or modulation
    • H04B10/5161Combination of different modulation schemes
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B2210/00Indexing scheme relating to optical transmission systems
    • H04B2210/516Optical conversion of optical modulation formats, e.g., from optical ASK to optical PSK

Definitions

  • This invention relates to signal transmissions in general, and more particularly to the transmission of optical signals and electrical signals.
  • the quality and performance of a digital fiber optic transmitter is determined by the distance over which the transmitted digital signal can propagate without severe distortions.
  • the bit error rate (BER) of the signal is measured at a receiver after propagation through dispersive fiber and the optical power required to obtain a certain BER, typically 10 "12 , called the sensitivity, is determined.
  • the difference in sensitivity at the output of the transmitter with the sensitivity after propagation is called dispersion penalty. This is typically characterized the distance over which a dispersion penalty reaches a level of ⁇ ldB.
  • Gb/s optical digital transmitter such as an externally modulated source can transmit up to a distance of ⁇ 50 km in standard single mode fiber at 1550 nm before the dispersion penalty reaches the level of ⁇ 1 dB, called the dispersion limit.
  • the dispersion limit is determined by the fundamental assumption that the digital signal is transform limited, i.e. the signal has no time varying phase across its bits and has a bit period of 100 ps, or 1/ (bit rate). Another measure of the quality of a transmitter is the absolute sensitivity after fiber propagation.
  • DML directly modulated laser
  • EML Electroabsorption Modulated Laser
  • MZ Externally Modulated Mach Zhender
  • MZ modulators and EMLs can have the longest reach, typically reaching 80 km.
  • MZ transmitters can reach 200 km.
  • DML directly modulated lasers
  • DML reach ⁇ 5 km because their inherent time dependent chirp causes severe distortion of the signal after this distance.
  • TAYE-31 of DMLs to > 80 km at 10 Gb/s in single mode fiber are disclosed in (i) U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/289,944, filed 11/06/02 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for POWER SOURCE FOR A DISPERSION COMPENSATION FIBER OPTIC SYSTEM (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00006); (ii) U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/680,607, filed 10/06/03 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT DISPERSION FREQUENCY DISCRIMINATOR (FDFD) (Attorney's Docket No.
  • FDFD FLAT DISPERSION FREQUENCY DISCRIMINATOR
  • a Frequency Modulated (AFM) source is followed by an Optical Spectrum Reshaper (OSR) which uses the frequency modulation to increase the amplitude modulated signal and partially compensate for dispersion in the transmission fiber.
  • the frequency modulated source may comprise a Directly Modulated Laser (DML).
  • the Optical Spectrum Reshaper (OSR) sometimes referred to as a frequency discriminator, can be formed by an appropriate optical element that has a wavelength-dependent transmission function.
  • the OSR can be adapted to convert frequency modulation to amplitude modulation.
  • the chirp properties of the frequency modulated source are separately adapted and then further reshaped by configuring the OSR to further extend the reach of a CMLTM transmitter to over
  • TAYE-31 60/548,230, filed 02/27/2004 by Yasuhiro Matsui et al. for entitled OPTICAL SYSTEM COMPRISING AN FM SOURCE AND A SPECTRAL RESHAPING ELEMENT (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-31 PRON); (ii) U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/554,243, filed 03/18/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-
  • This invention provides an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR) which works in tandem with a modulated optical source which, by modifying the spectral properties of the modulated signal, results in extending the optical transmission length well beyond the dispersion limit.
  • the OSR can be defined as a passive optical element that imparts an optical frequency dependent loss and frequency dependent phase on an input optical signal.
  • This invention also provides a modulated laser source and an optical spectrum reshaper system that increases tolerance to fiber dispersion as well as converting a partially frequency modulated signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal.
  • the optical spectrum reshaper (OSR) may be a variety of filters such as a Coupled Multicavity (CMC) filter to enhance the fidelity of converting a partially
  • a modulated laser source may be provided that is communicatably coupled to an optical filter where the filter is adapted to lock the wavelength of a laser source as well as converting the partially frequency modulated laser signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal.
  • a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base binary signal and produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to reshape the first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance of the second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber.
  • an optical transmitter comprising: a frequency modulated source for generating a first frequency modulated signal, and an amplitude modulator for receiving the first frequency modulated signal and for generating a second amplitude and frequency modulated signal.
  • a method for transmitting an optical signal through a transmission fiber comprising: receiving a base binary signal;
  • TAYE-31 operating an optical signal source using the base binary signal to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; passing the frequency modulated signal through an optical spectrum reshaper so as to reshape the first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance of the second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber; and passing the second signal through a transmission fiber.
  • a method for transmitting a base signal comprising: using the base signal to produce a frequency modulated signal; and providing an amplitude modulator for receiving the frequency modulated signal and for generating an amplitude and frequency modulated signal.
  • a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a frequency modulated signal; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert the frequency modulated signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal; characterized in that: the operating characteristics of the optical signal source and the optical characteristics of the optical spectrum reshaper combine to compensate for at least a portion of a dispersion in an optical fiber.
  • a method for transmitting an amplitude modulated signal through a fiber comprising:
  • TAYE-31 providing a laser and providing a filter having selected optical characteristics; inputting the amplitude modulated signal into the laser, and operating the laser, so as to generate a corresponding frequency modulated signal; passing the frequency modulated signal through the filter so as to generate a resulting signal and passing the resulting signal into the fiber; the laser being operated, and the filter being chosen, such that the resulting signal is configured to compensate for at least a portion of the dispersion in the fiber.
  • a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
  • a fiber optic communication system comprising: a module adapted to receive a first signal and convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that:
  • the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
  • a system adapted to convert a first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; the improvement comprising: tailoring the frequency characteristics of said second signal so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
  • a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base signal and produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
  • a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and
  • TAYE-31 an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency dependent loss of the optical spectrum reshaper is adjusted to increase the dispersion tolerance of the second signal.
  • a fiber optic system comprising: an optical source adapted to produce a frequency modulated digital signal; characterized in that: said digital signal has a time varying frequency modulation which is substantially constant across each 1 bit and equal to a first frequency and substantially constant over each 0 bit and equal to a second frequency, wherein the difference between said first frequency and said second frequency is between 0.2 times and 1.0 times the bit rate frequency.
  • a method for generating a dispersion tolerant digital signal comprising: modulating a DFB laser with a first digital base signal to generate a first optical FM signal, wherein said first FM signal has a ⁇ phase shift between 1 bits that are separated by an odd number of 0 bits, and modulating amplitude of said first optical FM signal with a second digital base signal to produce a second optical signal with high contrast ratio.
  • Fig. 1 illustrates an optical digital signal with concomitant amplitude modulation and frequency modulation (i.e., flat-topped chirp);
  • Fig. 2 illustrates the instantaneous frequency and phase of a 101 bit sequence for flat-topped chirp values of 5 GHz and 10 GHz for a 10 Gb/s digital signal;
  • Fig. 3 illustrates a 101 bit sequence with (CML output) and without
  • Fig. 4 illustrates a Gaussian pulse with adiabatic chirp profile before an OSR and the resulting pulse shape and flat-topped chirp after an OSR
  • Fig. 5 illustrates the instantaneous frequency profile of the pulse and definitions of the pulse
  • Fig. 6 illustrates the receiver sensitivity after 200 km as a function of the rise times and fall times of the instantaneous frequency profile
  • Fig. 7 illustrates the instantaneous frequency profile and intensity profile after an OSR with two different slopes
  • Fig. 8 illustrates the optical spectrum of an adiabatically chirped signal, the spectrum of the OSR, and the resulting reshaped spectrum
  • Fig. 4 illustrates a Gaussian pulse with adiabatic chirp profile before an OSR and the resulting pulse shape and flat-topped chirp after an OSR
  • Fig. 5 illustrates the instantaneous frequency profile of the pulse and definitions of the pulse
  • Fig. 6 illustrates the receiver sensitivity after 200 km as a function of the rise
  • FIG. 9 illustrates receiver sensitivity after 200 km of 17 ps/nm km fiber for various values of adiabatic chirp, and the spectral shift of signal relative to the OSR, which in this example is a 3 cavity etalon filter;
  • Fig. 10 illustrates an example of a non-Gaussian OSR and the spectral position of the signal relative to the OSR spectrum;
  • Fig. 11 illustrates the definition of slope of slope on an OSR;
  • Fig. 12 illustrates Bessel filters used as OSR provide the desired slope of slope
  • Fig. 13 illustrates optical and electrical eye diagrams before and after transmission through 200 km (3400 ps/nm) of fiber
  • Fig. 14 illustrates eye diagrams for back-back and after 200 km of fiber for a chirp managed laser (CMLTM) transmitter with transient chirp at the output of the laser
  • Fig. 15 illustrates measured slope and slope of slope for a 2 cavity etalon
  • Fig. 16 illustrates transmission and slope of an edge filter used as an OSR
  • Fig. 17 illustrates an example of an OSR with its dispersion profile
  • Fig. 18 illustrates sensitivity versus fiber length of dispersion in 17 ps/nm km fiber with and without dispersion of the OSR taken into account;
  • Fig. 19 illustrates FM optical source with a DFB FM modulator and separate amplitude modulator;
  • Fig. 20 illustrates FM optical source with a modulated DFB and integrated Electro-absorption modulator;
  • Fig. 21 illustrates the temporal profiles of the AM and FM signals;
  • Fig. 22 illustrates an optical FM/AM source with a bandwidth limiting OSR or filter.
  • the CMLTM generates a digital optical signal having concomitant amplitude and frequency modulation, such that there is a special correlation between the optical phases of the bits. This phase correlation provides a high tolerance of the resulting optical signal to dispersion in the optical fiber; further extending the reach of the CMLTM.
  • the CMLTM consists of a directly modulated DFB laser and an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR).
  • OSR optical spectrum reshaper
  • TAYE-31 distributed feedback (DFB) laser is modulated with an electrical digital signal, wherein a digital signal is represented by 1 bits and 0 bits.
  • the DFB laser is biased high above its threshold, for example, at 80 mA, and is modulated by a relatively small current modulation; the resulting optical signal has amplitude modulation (AM), the 1 bits having larger amplitude than the 0 bits.
  • AM amplitude modulation
  • ER extinction ratio
  • the modulated optical signal has a frequency modulation component, called adiabatic chirp, which is concomitant with the amplitude modulation and nearly has the same profile in time, an example of which is shown in Fig. 1.
  • the extinction ratio (ER) of the optical output can be varied over a range depending on the FM efficiency of the laser, defined as the ratio of the adiabatic chirp to the modulation current (GHz/mA). A higher modulation current increases ER, as well as the adiabatic chirp.
  • the chirp property of directly modulated lasers has been known for some time. When the laser is modulated with an electrical digital signal, its instantaneous optical frequency changes between two extremes, corresponding to the Is and 0s, and the difference in the frequency changes is referred to as adiabatic chirp.
  • transient chirp In addition to adiabatic chirp, which approximately follows the intensity profile, there are transient frequency components at the 1 to 0 and 0 to 1 transitions of the bits, called transient chirp.
  • the magnitude of transient chirp can be controlled by adjusting the bias of the laser relative to the modulation current. In one embodiment of the present invention, the transient chirp component is minimized by using a high bias and small modulation.
  • the signal is then passed through an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR), such as the edge of an optical band pass filter with a sharp slope.
  • the OSR modifies the frequency profile of the input optical signal, generating a flat-topped and square shaped frequency profile such as that shown in Fig. 1.
  • the magnitude of the resulting flat-topped chirp is chosen to be such
  • TAYE-31 that it provides a special phase correlation between the bits, as described below.
  • ⁇ FM the desired adiabatic chirp
  • ⁇ v specifies the modulation current
  • ⁇ z ⁇ v/ ⁇ FM , which in turn determines the extinction ratio
  • the bias current and I t h is the threshold current of the laser.
  • the magnitude of the flat-topped chirp after the OSR is determined by the magnitude of the adiabatic chirp at the output of the laser and the slope of the OSR.
  • the desired adiabatic chirp is ⁇ 4.5 GHz, and the ⁇ R ⁇ 1 dB for a DFB laser with FM efficiency ⁇ 0.2 GHz/mA. Passing this optical signal through an OSR with average slope of approximately 2.3 dB/GHz increases this chirp magnitude to about 5 GHz.
  • the significance of this value is the desired phase correlation between the bits as described below.
  • One important aspect of the present invention is the realization that as the frequency of an optical signal is changing with time, due to the chirp, the optical phase of the bits changes as well, depending on the bit period, rise fall times and the amount of chirp.
  • phase is a particular position on the carrier wave.
  • the phase difference between the crest of the wave and its trough, for example, is ⁇ .
  • Frequency describes the spacing between the peaks; higher frequency means the waves are getting bunched up and more crests are passing by per unit time.
  • phase is the time integral of optical frequency.
  • TAY ⁇ -3.1 An optical electric filed is characterized by an amplitude envelope and a time varying phase and a carrier frequency as follows:
  • A(t) is the amplitude envelope
  • coo is the optical carrier frequency
  • ⁇ ft is the time varying phase.
  • the time varying phase is zero.
  • the instantaneous frequency is defined by the following equation:
  • Equation 2 the negative sign in Equation 2 is based on the complex notation convention that takes the carrier frequency to be negative frequency.
  • the optical phase difference between two time points on the optical filed is given by:
  • phase shift is 2 ⁇ between two 1 bits separated by two 0 bits, and 3 ⁇ for two 1 bits separated by three 0 bits and so on.
  • two 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are ⁇ out of phase for 5
  • phase difference is 2 ⁇ .
  • the significance of this phase shift is realized when the 101 bit sequence with 5 GHz of flat-topped chirp is propagated through dispersive fiber, where each pulse broadens due to its finite bandwidth.
  • Fig. 3 shows that the ⁇ phase shift causes the two bits to interfere destructively at the center of the 0 bit, therefore keeping the 1 and 0 bits distinguishable by the decision circuit at the receiver.
  • the decision threshold chooses a threshold voltage above which all signals are counted as 1 and below which they are counted as 0 bits.
  • the phase shift helps differentiate between the 1 and 0 bits and the pulse broadening does not reduce the BER for this bit sequence. Therefore, the ⁇ phase shift constructed, based on the preferred embodiment of the present invention, increases tolerance to dispersion. For intermediate chirp values, there is partial interference, which is enough to extend transmission distance, but not to distances in the case described above.
  • the FM modulated signal generated is passed though an optical spectrum reshaper so as to change the instantaneous frequency profile of the signal across the 1 and 0 bits in such a way so as to increase the tolerance of the signal to dispersion.
  • an optical spectrum reshaper so as to change the instantaneous frequency profile of the signal across the 1 and 0 bits in such a way so as to increase the tolerance of the signal to dispersion.
  • the signal from the FM source is filtered to produce an intensity modulation, which is higher modulation depth after passing through the filter than that before passing through the filter.
  • optical spectrum reshaping rather than increase in amplitude modulation alone, can be achieved using an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR).
  • OSR optical spectrum reshaper
  • the instantaneous frequency profile of the output signal is modified across its bits after the OSR, so as to increase the distortion free propagation distance.
  • a semiconductor laser is directly modulated by a digital base signal to produce an FM modulated signal with adiabatic chirp.
  • the output ofthe laser is then passed through an OSR, • which, in this example, may be a 3 cavity etalon filter used at the edge of its transmission.
  • the chirp output of a frequency modulated source such as a directly modulated laser, is adiabatic. This means that the temporal frequency profile ofthe pulse has substantially the same shape as the intensity profile ofthe pulse.
  • the OSR converts the adiabatic chirp to flat- topped chirp, as described in U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/554,243, filed 03/18/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No.
  • Fig. 4 shows the optical intensity and the instantaneous frequency profile of a Gaussian pulse before and after an OSR.
  • the Gaussian pulse has adiabatic chirp before the OSR, i.e., its instantaneous frequency profile has the same Gaussian shape as its intensity profile.
  • OSR adiabatic chirp
  • both the amplitude and instantaneous frequency profiles are altered.
  • the ratio of peak power-to-power in the background (extinction ratio) is increased, and the pulse narrows slightly in this example.
  • An important aspect ofthe present invention is the flat-topped
  • TAYE-31 instantaneous frequency profile resulting from passage through the OSR, indicated by the dotted horizontal green line in Fig. 4.
  • the flat-topped chirp is produced when the spectral position ofthe optical spectrum ofthe signal is aligned with the edge ofthe OSR transmission. The optimum position depends on the adiabatic chirp and the slope ofthe OSR transmission edge.
  • the instantaneous frequency profile of a flat-topped chirp pulse is characterized by a rise time, a fall time, duration and a slope ofthe flat-top, and a flat-topped chirp value as shown in Fig. 5.
  • the slope in turn, can be defined by the two frequency values f and/;.
  • the rise time, fall time, duration, and slope ofthe top-hat portion ofthe frequency profile are adjusted relative to the rise time, fall time, duration ofthe amplitude profile, in order to increase the transmission distance ofthe signal beyond the dispersion limit.
  • the importance of reshaping the instantaneous frequency profile ofthe pulses can be realized by simulation which shows the bit error rate of such a spectrally reshaped 10 Gb/s pulse after propagation though 200 km of dispersive fiber having 17 ps/nm km dispersion.
  • Fig. 6 shows that for a given flat-topped chirp value as measured in the instantaneous frequency profile ofthe signal after the OSR.
  • the BER sensitivity can be optimized by varying the rise time and fall time.
  • the chirp value can be varied over a range from 3 GHz to 10 GHz in order to achieve a desired BER sensitivity after propagation through fiber.
  • the following conclusions can be drawn from this example calculation: (i) the optimum adiabatic chirp after the OSR is 5GHz, with short rise time and fall time for the instantaneous frequency profile; this achieves the lowest sensitivity after fiber propagation; (ii) any chirp in the range of 3-10GHz can be used to extend transmission relative to the case of no chirp.
  • the rise time and fall times have to
  • TAYE-31 be adjusted based on the adiabatic chirp value.
  • a rise time and fall time of ⁇ 3 Ops is always optimum; and (iii) the rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency can be reduced by increasing the slope in dB/GHz ofthe transmission profile ofthe OSR. Slope of top-hat portion ofthe frequency profile is determined by the dispersion ofthe OSR and provides further dispersion tolerance.
  • Fig. 7 shows another example, where the rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency profile are reduced after the OSR by increasing the slope in dB/GHz of the OSR, here by a factor of 2.
  • the output of a frequency modulated signal is passed through an OSR and the rise time and fall time ofthe frequency profile are reduced by increasing the slope (in dB/GHz) ofthe OSR.
  • Spectral Narrowing Simultaneous frequency modulation and amplitude modulation with the same digital information reduces the optical bandwidth ofthe signal and suppresses the carrier frequency. This effect is most marked for a chirp value that is ⁇ / ⁇ the bit rate frequency; i.e., 5GHz chirp for 10 Gb/s. This corresponds to the phase change of 0 to ⁇ between 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits, i.e., optimum correlation between the phases of the otherwise random bit sequence.
  • the chirp is ⁇ 7.5 GHz for 10 Gb/s.
  • the spectral position ofthe signal relative to the peak transmission ofthe OSR is adjusted such that the spectrum in on the low frequency edge ofthe OSR. This further reduces the spectral width on the low frequency side. Reducing the spectral bandwidth extends the transmission distance.
  • the Bandwidth (BW) ofthe OSR is less than the bit rate.
  • the spectrum of a digital signal is determined by the product ofthe spectrum ofthe digital info ⁇ nation and the Fourier transform ofthe pulse shape.
  • Fig. 8 shows that for a given value of adiabatic chirp, the spectral position ofthe signal relative to the peak transmission ofthe OSR can be adjusted to increase the transmission distance.
  • Fig. 9 shows an example of an OSR, formed by a non-Gaussian shaped band pass filter.
  • Fig. 9 shows the transmission profile in dB scale as well as the derivative, or frequency dependent slope, ofthe OSR.
  • Fig. 9 also shows the
  • the optimal spectral position ofthe FM signal on the OSR be such that the Is peak frequency be near the peak logarithmic derivative ofthe transmission profile ofthe OSR.
  • the derivative is not linear on the dB scale, indicating that the OSR has a non-Gaussian spectral profile.
  • a Gaussian OSR would have a linear slope as a function of frequency.
  • Fig. 9 also shows the position ofthe clock frequency components ofthe input FM signal, which are reduced substantially after the OSR. This in-turn reduces the clock frequency components in the RF spectrum ofthe resulting second signal after the OSR.
  • the peak slope is 2.7 dB/GHz, and the 3 dB bandwidth ofthe OSR in this case is approximately 8 GHz.
  • the OSR it is an embodiment ofthe present invention for the OSR to also reduce the clock frequency components, 10 GHz for a 10 Gb/s NRZ signal, in the RF spectrum ofthe signal resulting after the OSR.
  • the optimum OSR shape is one for which the transmitter has good performance both at its output (Back-to-back) as well as after transmission.
  • the back-to-back performance is determined by having minimum distortion ofthe bits in the eye diagram, while after transmission performance is determined by a low dispersion penalty.
  • 60/554,243 Alignitorney Docket No. TAYE-34 PROV
  • 60/629,741 Alignitorney's
  • slope of slope is the ratio ofthe peak logarithmic derivative ofthe transmission (in dB/GHz) to the frequency offset of this peak form the transmission peak (in GHz), as illustrated in Fig. 11.
  • the slope of slope of an OSR is adjusted to optimize both the back-to-back transmitter BER and to reduce the BER after fiber transmission. For example, for a 10 Gb/s transmitter good back-to-back eye diagram, as well as low BER after transmission is obtained if the slope of slope is approximately in the range of 0.38 dB/GHz 2 to 0.6 dB/GHz 2 .
  • the slope ofthe OSR near the center ofthe transmission needs to be approximately linear. Deviations from linearity introduce distortions in the resulting output eye diagram and thus cause increased bit error rate.
  • a linear slope corresponds to a round-top shape filter. So, for example, a flat-topped filter, which has a near zero slope near the center is not desirable.
  • the 3 dB band width ofthe band-pass OSR has to be in the range of 65% to 90% ofthe bit rate.
  • Two examples of such OSRs, as shown in Fig. 12, are 2 nd order Bessel filters having a 6 GHz or 5.5 GHz band widths.
  • the 2 nd order Bessel filter shape is well known to the skilled in the art and is described mathematically by
  • j? 2if/Af 3dB .
  • Tis the field transmission /is the optical frequency offset from the center of filter, and ⁇ / j is the 3 dB band width ofthe filter.
  • the measured quantity is the optical transmission ofthe filter, which is the absolute square ofthe field transmission in Eq. 6, ⁇ T ⁇ p) ⁇ and is plotted in Fig. 12.
  • Bessel filter is usually used as an electrical low pass filter because it minimizes
  • the Bessel filter is an optical filter, and it is chosen because it provides the desired slope of slope and linear slope near its peak transmission.
  • the slope of slope for the 2 nd order Bessel filter with a 6 GHz bandwidth is 0.46 dB/GHz 2
  • the slope of slope for the 5.5 GHz bandwidth 2 nd order Bessel filter is 0.57 dB/GHz 2 .
  • a filter that can be used in accordance with the present invention is a 4 th order Bessel filter with a band width of 7.5 GHz, also shown in Fig. 12. This OSR has a slope of slope of 0.41 dB/GHz 2 .
  • Fig. 13 shows examples of calculated eye diagrams for back-back and ' after 200 km of fiber having 3400 ps/nm dispersion.
  • the 2 nd order Bessel filter with 5.5 GHz bandwidth was used.
  • the eye diagrams on the left column are the back-back optical eye (so-called O-eye) of transmitter (top) and the eye transmitted after 200 km (3400 ps/nm).
  • the eye diagrams on the right column are the eye diagrams measured after an optical to electrical converter with a typical ⁇ 8 GHz band width, which is called electrical eye (E-eye).
  • the electrical eye is that at the output ofthe receiver, which converts the optical to electrical signal and provides it to the decision circuit for distinguishing the 1 and O bits.
  • a directly modulated laser produces transient chirp, which occurs at the 1 to 0 and 0 to 1 bit transitions, in addition to adiabatic chirp. In a conventional directly modulated laser, transient chi ⁇ is detrimental as it hastens pulse
  • Fig. 14 shows the results of simulation of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention.
  • the adiabatic chi ⁇ ofthe laser is 4.5 GHz and the OSR is a 2 cavity etalon filter operated near its transmission edge.
  • Fig. 14 shows the eye diagrams of a 10 Gb/s transmitter at its output (back-back), as well as the eye after propagation through 200 km of fiber with 3400 ps/nm dispersion.
  • OSR is either nearly zero ( ⁇ 0.2 GHz) (left column) or 2 GHz (right column). Looking at Fig. 14, it is clear that the case having 2 GHz transient chi ⁇ produces a less distorted eye back to back. The eye after 200 km of fiber is also more open and has less inter-symbol interference (ISI) in the case having 2 GHz transient chi ⁇ . It is, therefore, one embodiment ofthe present invention to adjust the transient chi ⁇ ofthe frequency modulated source as well as the slope of slope of the optical spectrum reshaper to obtain the desired transmitter output having minimum distortion and to increase the error free propagation length ofthe transmitter beyond the dispersion limit.
  • ISI inter-symbol interference
  • an optical filter such as a multicavity etalon may not have the desired transmission shape and slope of slope. Therefore, in another embodiment ofthe present invention, the angle of incidence and the beam divergence ofthe optical signal impinging upon the filter are adjusted to obtain the desired SoS.
  • Fig. 15 shows an example ofthe measured slope as well as slope ofthe slope as a function of angle of incidence for a 2 cavity etalon. The peak slope initially decreases for increasing angles, reaches a minimum, and then increases again. The increase in slope at large angles is caused by spatial filtering, as described in U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/621,755, filed 10/25/04 by 10/25/04 et
  • the OSR may be an edge filter, as shown in Fig. 16.
  • the edge filter has a substantially flat transmission with frequency over a frequency range and a sha ⁇ edge on one side ofthe peak transmission.
  • the position ofthe first optical signal in this case will be substantially on the slope of transmission.
  • OSR Dispersion The OSR can also provide some dispersion compensation as well as the spectral reshaping.
  • Fig. 17 shows the transmission characteristics of a filter and its corresponding dispersion profile.
  • the filter dispersion can compensate for a portion ofthe fiber dispersion. For example, if the laser frequency spectrum substantially overlaps with the normal dispersion peak, having a negative dispersion, the transmission for a standard single fiber having positive dispersion is extended.
  • Fig. 18 shows the sensitivity as a function of fiber distance for a case of an OSR with and without dispersion.
  • the laser spectrum substantially overlaps with the negative dispersion peak ofthe
  • the negative distance indicates a fiber having negative dispersion of that length. So, for example, -100 km indicates a 100 km dispersion compensating fiber having -17 ps/nm km dispersion.
  • FM Sources The present invention teaches a variety of methods for generation of a dispersion tolerant FM signal with high extinction ratio (ER).
  • the FM signal is generated in two steps. First, a base digital signal is chosen to modulate a directly modulated DFB laser so as to generate an FM signal with adiabatic chi ⁇ such that the phase difference between two 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits is an odd integer multiple of ⁇ .
  • the resulting optical signal is sent through a second amplitude modulator, such as a LiNbO 3 modulator or an electro-abso ⁇ tion modulator, as shown in Fig. 19.
  • the amplitude modulator is modulated by a second digital base signal, which is a replica ofthe first digital base signal.
  • the base signal supplied to the modulator may be inverted relative to that modulating the laser, depending on the transfer function ofthe modulator. This is the case, for example, if a higher signal increases the loss ofthe modulator.
  • the AM modulator may be a variety of optical amplitude modulators such as a LiNbO 3 modulator, or an electro-abso ⁇ tion modulator.
  • the DFB and EA may be integrated on the same chip, as shown in Fig. 20.
  • the first and second base signals supplied to the laser and modulator may be adapted to generate FM and AM signals, respectively. These FM and AM signals are different in
  • TAYE-31 temporal profiles as demonstrated in Fig. 21, in that there may be a phase difference between the two digital base signals.
  • the rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency of the first signal and the rise time and fall time of the resulting second signal after the AM modulator may be different.
  • the durations ofthe FM and AM pulse profiles may be different.
  • the duration, rise time and fall time, adiabatic chi ⁇ , amplitude modulation depth, and the phase delay between the two digital base signals are varied, as described by the prescriptions and examples above, so as to increase the dispersion tolerance ofthe transmitted signal to fiber dispersion.
  • a bandwidth limiting filter or an OSR placed after the FM/AM source described above.
  • the OSR or filter is chosen so as to reduce the optical frequency components that are at, or higher than, the bit rate frequency, 10 GHz for a 10 Gb/s NRZ signal, for example.

Abstract

A fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base binary signal and produce a first frequency modulated signal, and an optical spectrum reshaper or an amplitude modulator adapted to reshape the first signal into a second amplitude and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance of the second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a method for transmitting a base signal, comprising: using the base signal to produce a frequency modulated signal; and providing an amplitude modulator for receiving the frequency modulated signal and for generating an amplitude and frequency modulated signal.

Description

OPTICAL SYSTEM COMPRISING AN FM SOURCE AND A SPECTRAL RESHAPING ELEMENT
Reference To Pending Prior Patent Applications This patent application: (i) is a continuation-in-part of pending prior U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/289,944, filed 11/06/02 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for POWER SOURCE FOR A DISPERSION COMPENSATION FIBER OPTIC SYSTEM (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00006); (ii) is a continuation-in-part of pending prior U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/308,522, filed 12/03/02 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for HIGH-SPEED TRANSMISSION SYSTEM COMPRISING A COUPLED MULTI-CAVITY OPTICAL DISCRIMINATOR (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00007); (iii) is a continuation-in-part of pending prior U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/680,607, filed 10/06/03 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT DISPERSION FREQUENCY DISCRIMINATOR (FDFD) (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00009); (iv) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/548,230, filed 02/27/2004 by Yasuhiro Matsui et al. for OPTICAL SYSTEM COMPRISING AN FM SOURCE AND A SPECTRAL RESHAPING ELEMENT (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-31 PRON); (v) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/554,243, filed 03/18/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-34 PRON); (vi) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/566,060, filed 04/28/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for A METHOD OF TRANSMISSION USING PARTIAL FM AND AM MODULATION (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-37 PROV); (vii) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/567,737, filed 05/03/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for ADIABATIC FREQUENCY MODULATION (AFM) (Attorney Docket No.
TAYE-39 PRON); (viii) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/569,769, filed 05/10/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY AN OPTICAL FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-40 PRON); (ix) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/569,768, filed 05/10/2004 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for METHOD OF TRANSMISSION USING PARTIAL FM AND AM MODULATION (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-41 PRON); (x) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application
Serial No. 60/621,755, filed 10/25/04 by Kevin McCallion et al. for SPECTRAL RESPONSE MODIFICATION VIA SPATIAL FILTERING WITH OPTICAL FIBER (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-47 PRON); and (xi) claims benefit of pending prior U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/629,741, filed 11/19/04 by Yasuhiro Matsui et al. for OPTICAL
SYSTEM COMPRISING AN FM SOURCE AND A SPECTRAL RESHAPING ELEMENT (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-48 PRON). The eleven above-identified patent applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Field Of The Invention: This invention relates to signal transmissions in general, and more particularly to the transmission of optical signals and electrical signals.
TAYE-31 Background Of The Invention The quality and performance of a digital fiber optic transmitter is determined by the distance over which the transmitted digital signal can propagate without severe distortions. The bit error rate (BER) of the signal is measured at a receiver after propagation through dispersive fiber and the optical power required to obtain a certain BER, typically 10"12, called the sensitivity, is determined. The difference in sensitivity at the output of the transmitter with the sensitivity after propagation is called dispersion penalty. This is typically characterized the distance over which a dispersion penalty reaches a level of ~ ldB. A standard 10
Gb/s optical digital transmitter, such as an externally modulated source can transmit up to a distance of ~ 50 km in standard single mode fiber at 1550 nm before the dispersion penalty reaches the level of ~1 dB, called the dispersion limit. The dispersion limit is determined by the fundamental assumption that the digital signal is transform limited, i.e. the signal has no time varying phase across its bits and has a bit period of 100 ps, or 1/ (bit rate). Another measure of the quality of a transmitter is the absolute sensitivity after fiber propagation. Three types of optical transmitters are presently in use in prior art fiber optic systems: (i) directly modulated laser (DML), (ii) Electroabsorption Modulated Laser (EML), and (iii) Externally Modulated Mach Zhender (MZ),
For transmission in standard single mode fiber at 10 Gb/s, and 1550 nm, it has generally been assumed that MZ modulators and EMLs can have the longest reach, typically reaching 80 km. Using a special coding scheme, referred to as phase shaped duobinary, MZ transmitters can reach 200 km. On the other hand, directly modulated lasers (DML) reach < 5 km because their inherent time dependent chirp causes severe distortion of the signal after this distance. By way of example, various systems for long-reach lightwave data transmission (> 80 km at 10 Gb/s) through optical fibers which increase the reach
TAYE-31 of DMLs to > 80 km at 10 Gb/s in single mode fiber are disclosed in (i) U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/289,944, filed 11/06/02 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for POWER SOURCE FOR A DISPERSION COMPENSATION FIBER OPTIC SYSTEM (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00006); (ii) U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/680,607, filed 10/06/03 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT DISPERSION FREQUENCY DISCRIMINATOR (FDFD) (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00009); and (iii) U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 10/308,522, filed 12/03/02 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for HIGH-SPEED TRANSMISSION SYSTEM COMPRISING A COUPLED MULTI-CAVITY OPTICAL DISCRIMINATOR (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-59474-00007); which patent applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference. The transmitter associated with these novel systems is sometimes referred to as a Chirp Managed Laser (CML)™ by Azna LLC of Wilmington, Massachusetts. In these new systems, a Frequency Modulated (AFM) source is followed by an Optical Spectrum Reshaper (OSR) which uses the frequency modulation to increase the amplitude modulated signal and partially compensate for dispersion in the transmission fiber. In one embodiment, the frequency modulated source may comprise a Directly Modulated Laser (DML). The Optical Spectrum Reshaper (OSR), sometimes referred to as a frequency discriminator, can be formed by an appropriate optical element that has a wavelength-dependent transmission function. The OSR can be adapted to convert frequency modulation to amplitude modulation. In the novel system of the present invention, the chirp properties of the frequency modulated source are separately adapted and then further reshaped by configuring the OSR to further extend the reach of a CML™ transmitter to over
250 km on standard single mode fiber at 10 Gb/s and 1550 nm. The novel system of the present invention combines, among other things, selected features of systems described in (i) U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No.
TAYE-31 60/548,230, filed 02/27/2004 by Yasuhiro Matsui et al. for entitled OPTICAL SYSTEM COMPRISING AN FM SOURCE AND A SPECTRAL RESHAPING ELEMENT (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-31 PRON); (ii) U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/554,243, filed 03/18/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-
34 PRON); (iv) U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/566,060, filed 04/28/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for, A METHOD OF TRANSMISSION USING PARTIAL FM AND AM MODULATION (Attorney Docket No. TAYE- 37 PRON); (iv) U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/567,737, filed 05/03/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for ADIABATIC FREQUENCY
MODULATION (AFM) (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-39 PRON); (v) U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/569,769, filed 05/10/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY AN OPTICAL FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-40 PRON), which patent applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
Summary Of The Invention This invention provides an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR) which works in tandem with a modulated optical source which, by modifying the spectral properties of the modulated signal, results in extending the optical transmission length well beyond the dispersion limit. The OSR can be defined as a passive optical element that imparts an optical frequency dependent loss and frequency dependent phase on an input optical signal. This invention also provides a modulated laser source and an optical spectrum reshaper system that increases tolerance to fiber dispersion as well as converting a partially frequency modulated signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal. The optical spectrum reshaper (OSR) may be a variety of filters such as a Coupled Multicavity (CMC) filter to enhance the fidelity of converting a partially
TAYE-31 frequency modulated signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal. The OSR may also partially compensate for the dispersion of the fiber. In one embodiment of the present invention, a modulated laser source may be provided that is communicatably coupled to an optical filter where the filter is adapted to lock the wavelength of a laser source as well as converting the partially frequency modulated laser signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal. In one form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base binary signal and produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to reshape the first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance of the second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber. In another form of the present invention, there is provided an optical transmitter comprising: a frequency modulated source for generating a first frequency modulated signal, and an amplitude modulator for receiving the first frequency modulated signal and for generating a second amplitude and frequency modulated signal. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a method for transmitting an optical signal through a transmission fiber comprising: receiving a base binary signal;
TAYE-31 operating an optical signal source using the base binary signal to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; passing the frequency modulated signal through an optical spectrum reshaper so as to reshape the first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance of the second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber; and passing the second signal through a transmission fiber. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a method for transmitting a base signal, comprising: using the base signal to produce a frequency modulated signal; and providing an amplitude modulator for receiving the frequency modulated signal and for generating an amplitude and frequency modulated signal. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a frequency modulated signal; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert the frequency modulated signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal; characterized in that: the operating characteristics of the optical signal source and the optical characteristics of the optical spectrum reshaper combine to compensate for at least a portion of a dispersion in an optical fiber. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a method for transmitting an amplitude modulated signal through a fiber comprising:
TAYE-31 providing a laser and providing a filter having selected optical characteristics; inputting the amplitude modulated signal into the laser, and operating the laser, so as to generate a corresponding frequency modulated signal; passing the frequency modulated signal through the filter so as to generate a resulting signal and passing the resulting signal into the fiber; the laser being operated, and the filter being chosen, such that the resulting signal is configured to compensate for at least a portion of the dispersion in the fiber. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic communication system comprising: a module adapted to receive a first signal and convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that:
TAYE-31 the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a system adapted to convert a first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; the improvement comprising: tailoring the frequency characteristics of said second signal so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base signal and produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and
TAYE-31 an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency dependent loss of the optical spectrum reshaper is adjusted to increase the dispersion tolerance of the second signal. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a fiber optic system comprising: an optical source adapted to produce a frequency modulated digital signal; characterized in that: said digital signal has a time varying frequency modulation which is substantially constant across each 1 bit and equal to a first frequency and substantially constant over each 0 bit and equal to a second frequency, wherein the difference between said first frequency and said second frequency is between 0.2 times and 1.0 times the bit rate frequency. In another form of the present invention, there is provided a method for generating a dispersion tolerant digital signal, comprising: modulating a DFB laser with a first digital base signal to generate a first optical FM signal, wherein said first FM signal has a π phase shift between 1 bits that are separated by an odd number of 0 bits, and modulating amplitude of said first optical FM signal with a second digital base signal to produce a second optical signal with high contrast ratio.
Detailed Description Of The Preferred Embodiments Many modifications, variations and combinations of the methods and systems and apparatus of a dispersion compensated optical filter are possible in light of the embodiments described herein. The description above and many other
TAYE-31 features and attendant advantages of the present invention will become apparent from a consideration of the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein like numbers refer to like parts and further wherein: Fig. 1 illustrates an optical digital signal with concomitant amplitude modulation and frequency modulation (i.e., flat-topped chirp); Fig. 2 illustrates the instantaneous frequency and phase of a 101 bit sequence for flat-topped chirp values of 5 GHz and 10 GHz for a 10 Gb/s digital signal; Fig. 3 illustrates a 101 bit sequence with (CML output) and without
(Standard NRZ) flat-topped chirp before and after propagation; Fig. 4 illustrates a Gaussian pulse with adiabatic chirp profile before an OSR and the resulting pulse shape and flat-topped chirp after an OSR; Fig. 5 illustrates the instantaneous frequency profile of the pulse and definitions of the pulse; Fig. 6 illustrates the receiver sensitivity after 200 km as a function of the rise times and fall times of the instantaneous frequency profile; Fig. 7 illustrates the instantaneous frequency profile and intensity profile after an OSR with two different slopes; Fig. 8 illustrates the optical spectrum of an adiabatically chirped signal, the spectrum of the OSR, and the resulting reshaped spectrum; Fig. 9 illustrates receiver sensitivity after 200 km of 17 ps/nm km fiber for various values of adiabatic chirp, and the spectral shift of signal relative to the OSR, which in this example is a 3 cavity etalon filter; Fig. 10 illustrates an example of a non-Gaussian OSR and the spectral position of the signal relative to the OSR spectrum; Fig. 11 illustrates the definition of slope of slope on an OSR;
TAYE-31 Fig. 12 illustrates Bessel filters used as OSR provide the desired slope of slope; Fig. 13 illustrates optical and electrical eye diagrams before and after transmission through 200 km (3400 ps/nm) of fiber; Fig. 14 illustrates eye diagrams for back-back and after 200 km of fiber for a chirp managed laser (CML™) transmitter with transient chirp at the output of the laser; Fig. 15 illustrates measured slope and slope of slope for a 2 cavity etalon; Fig. 16 illustrates transmission and slope of an edge filter used as an OSR; Fig. 17 illustrates an example of an OSR with its dispersion profile; Fig. 18 illustrates sensitivity versus fiber length of dispersion in 17 ps/nm km fiber with and without dispersion of the OSR taken into account; Fig. 19 illustrates FM optical source with a DFB FM modulator and separate amplitude modulator; Fig. 20 illustrates FM optical source with a modulated DFB and integrated Electro-absorption modulator; Fig. 21 illustrates the temporal profiles of the AM and FM signals; and Fig. 22 illustrates an optical FM/AM source with a bandwidth limiting OSR or filter.
Detailed Description Of The Preferred Embodiments In one embodiment of the present invention, the CML™ generates a digital optical signal having concomitant amplitude and frequency modulation, such that there is a special correlation between the optical phases of the bits. This phase correlation provides a high tolerance of the resulting optical signal to dispersion in the optical fiber; further extending the reach of the CML™. In one preferred embodiment of the present invention, the CML™ consists of a directly modulated DFB laser and an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR). The
TAYE-31 distributed feedback (DFB) laser is modulated with an electrical digital signal, wherein a digital signal is represented by 1 bits and 0 bits. The DFB laser is biased high above its threshold, for example, at 80 mA, and is modulated by a relatively small current modulation; the resulting optical signal has amplitude modulation (AM), the 1 bits having larger amplitude than the 0 bits. The ratio of the amplitude of the 1 bits to the 0 bits is typically referred to as the extinction ratio (ER). Importantly, the modulated optical signal has a frequency modulation component, called adiabatic chirp, which is concomitant with the amplitude modulation and nearly has the same profile in time, an example of which is shown in Fig. 1. The extinction ratio (ER) of the optical output can be varied over a range depending on the FM efficiency of the laser, defined as the ratio of the adiabatic chirp to the modulation current (GHz/mA). A higher modulation current increases ER, as well as the adiabatic chirp. The chirp property of directly modulated lasers has been known for some time. When the laser is modulated with an electrical digital signal, its instantaneous optical frequency changes between two extremes, corresponding to the Is and 0s, and the difference in the frequency changes is referred to as adiabatic chirp. In addition to adiabatic chirp, which approximately follows the intensity profile, there are transient frequency components at the 1 to 0 and 0 to 1 transitions of the bits, called transient chirp. The magnitude of transient chirp can be controlled by adjusting the bias of the laser relative to the modulation current. In one embodiment of the present invention, the transient chirp component is minimized by using a high bias and small modulation. The signal is then passed through an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR), such as the edge of an optical band pass filter with a sharp slope. The OSR modifies the frequency profile of the input optical signal, generating a flat-topped and square shaped frequency profile such as that shown in Fig. 1. In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the magnitude of the resulting flat-topped chirp is chosen to be such
TAYE-31 that it provides a special phase correlation between the bits, as described below. Given an FM efficiency value, ηFM , the desired adiabatic chirp, Δv specifies the modulation current, Δz = Δv/ηFM , which in turn determines the extinction ratio, the bias current, and Ith is the threshold
Figure imgf000016_0001
current of the laser. The magnitude of the flat-topped chirp after the OSR is determined by the magnitude of the adiabatic chirp at the output of the laser and the slope of the OSR. For a 10 Gb/s NRZ signal, for example, the desired adiabatic chirp is ~ 4.5 GHz, and the ΕR ~ 1 dB for a DFB laser with FM efficiency ~ 0.2 GHz/mA. Passing this optical signal through an OSR with average slope of approximately 2.3 dB/GHz increases this chirp magnitude to about 5 GHz. The significance of this value is the desired phase correlation between the bits as described below. One important aspect of the present invention is the realization that as the frequency of an optical signal is changing with time, due to the chirp, the optical phase of the bits changes as well, depending on the bit period, rise fall times and the amount of chirp. It should be noted that when monitoring the optical carrier wave, which is a sine wave, it can be observed that at some point in time, phase is a particular position on the carrier wave. The phase difference between the crest of the wave and its trough, for example, is π. Frequency describes the spacing between the peaks; higher frequency means the waves are getting bunched up and more crests are passing by per unit time. Mathematically, phase is the time integral of optical frequency. When the laser is modulated by a digital signal with bit period T, the optical phase difference between two bits depends on the flat- topped chirp, as well as on the total time difference between the bits. This phase difference can be used to increase the propagation of the signal in the fiber as is shown in the following example.
TAYΕ-3.1 An optical electric filed is characterized by an amplitude envelope and a time varying phase and a carrier frequency as follows:
E(t) = A{f) exρ(-z'ω0t + iφ{t)) (1)
where A(t) is the amplitude envelope, coo is the optical carrier frequency, and φft) is the time varying phase. For example, for a chirp-free, or so-called transform limited, pulse, the time varying phase is zero. The instantaneous frequency is defined by the following equation:
1 d (t) fit) (2) 2κ dt
Note that the negative sign in Equation 2 is based on the complex notation convention that takes the carrier frequency to be negative frequency. Hence the optical phase difference between two time points on the optical filed is given by:
Aφ = φ(t2) - φ{t1) = 2π \k f{t)dt (3)
Let's consider a 101 bit sequence at the output of a CML™ having a certain magnitude flat-topped chirp. Taking the frequency of the 1 bits as a reference frequency, we obtain the plot shown below in two cases for a 10 Gb/s digital signal (100 ps pulse duration) for flat-topped chirp values of 5 GHz and 10 GHz. The pulses are assumed to have ideal square shape amplitudes and flat- topped chirp with 100 ps duration. Significantly, for 5 GHz of flat-topped chirp there is a π phase shift between the two 1 bits separated by a single zero.
TAYE-31 Δty = 2πx 5 GHz x l00ps = π (4)
Following Equations 3 and 4, the phase shift is 2π between two 1 bits separated by two 0 bits, and 3π for two 1 bits separated by three 0 bits and so on. In general, two 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are π out of phase for 5
GHz of chirp, and a 10 Gb/s signal. For 10 GHz of chirp and 10 Gb/s square pulses the 1 bits separated by odd number of bits are in phase; i.e. phase difference is 2π. The significance of this phase shift is realized when the 101 bit sequence with 5 GHz of flat-topped chirp is propagated through dispersive fiber, where each pulse broadens due to its finite bandwidth. Fig. 3 shows that the π phase shift causes the two bits to interfere destructively at the center of the 0 bit, therefore keeping the 1 and 0 bits distinguishable by the decision circuit at the receiver. The decision threshold chooses a threshold voltage above which all signals are counted as 1 and below which they are counted as 0 bits. Hence, the phase shift helps differentiate between the 1 and 0 bits and the pulse broadening does not reduce the BER for this bit sequence. Therefore, the π phase shift constructed, based on the preferred embodiment of the present invention, increases tolerance to dispersion. For intermediate chirp values, there is partial interference, which is enough to extend transmission distance, but not to distances in the case described above.
Optical Spectrum Reshaping In one embodiment of the present invention, the FM modulated signal generated is passed though an optical spectrum reshaper so as to change the instantaneous frequency profile of the signal across the 1 and 0 bits in such a way so as to increase the tolerance of the signal to dispersion. In the prior art, such as
TAYE-31 UK Patent No. GB 2107147A by R. E. Epworth, the signal from the FM source is filtered to produce an intensity modulation, which is higher modulation depth after passing through the filter than that before passing through the filter. In the present invention, optical spectrum reshaping, rather than increase in amplitude modulation alone, can be achieved using an optical spectrum reshaper (OSR). In one embodiment of the present invention, the instantaneous frequency profile of the output signal is modified across its bits after the OSR, so as to increase the distortion free propagation distance. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a semiconductor laser is directly modulated by a digital base signal to produce an FM modulated signal with adiabatic chirp. The output ofthe laser is then passed through an OSR, which, in this example, may be a 3 cavity etalon filter used at the edge of its transmission. The chirp output of a frequency modulated source, such as a directly modulated laser, is adiabatic. This means that the temporal frequency profile ofthe pulse has substantially the same shape as the intensity profile ofthe pulse. In a preferred embodiment, the OSR converts the adiabatic chirp to flat- topped chirp, as described in U.S. Provisional Patent Application Serial No. 60/554,243, filed 03/18/04 by Daniel Mahgerefteh et al. for FLAT CHIRP INDUCED BY FILTER EDGE (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-34 PROV), which patent application is hereby incorporated herein by reference. Fig. 4 shows the optical intensity and the instantaneous frequency profile of a Gaussian pulse before and after an OSR. The Gaussian pulse has adiabatic chirp before the OSR, i.e., its instantaneous frequency profile has the same Gaussian shape as its intensity profile. After the OSR, both the amplitude and instantaneous frequency profiles are altered. The ratio of peak power-to-power in the background (extinction ratio) is increased, and the pulse narrows slightly in this example. An important aspect ofthe present invention is the flat-topped
TAYE-31 instantaneous frequency profile resulting from passage through the OSR, indicated by the dotted horizontal green line in Fig. 4. The flat-topped chirp is produced when the spectral position ofthe optical spectrum ofthe signal is aligned with the edge ofthe OSR transmission. The optimum position depends on the adiabatic chirp and the slope ofthe OSR transmission edge. The instantaneous frequency profile of a flat-topped chirp pulse is characterized by a rise time, a fall time, duration and a slope ofthe flat-top, and a flat-topped chirp value as shown in Fig. 5. The slope, in turn, can be defined by the two frequency values f and/;. In an embodiment ofthe present invention the rise time, fall time, duration, and slope ofthe top-hat portion ofthe frequency profile are adjusted relative to the rise time, fall time, duration ofthe amplitude profile, in order to increase the transmission distance ofthe signal beyond the dispersion limit. The importance of reshaping the instantaneous frequency profile ofthe pulses can be realized by simulation which shows the bit error rate of such a spectrally reshaped 10 Gb/s pulse after propagation though 200 km of dispersive fiber having 17 ps/nm km dispersion. Fig. 6 shows that for a given flat-topped chirp value as measured in the instantaneous frequency profile ofthe signal after the OSR. In such a case, the BER sensitivity can be optimized by varying the rise time and fall time. Also, for a given rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency profile, the chirp value can be varied over a range from 3 GHz to 10 GHz in order to achieve a desired BER sensitivity after propagation through fiber. The following conclusions can be drawn from this example calculation: (i) the optimum adiabatic chirp after the OSR is 5GHz, with short rise time and fall time for the instantaneous frequency profile; this achieves the lowest sensitivity after fiber propagation; (ii) any chirp in the range of 3-10GHz can be used to extend transmission relative to the case of no chirp. The rise time and fall times have to
TAYE-31 be adjusted based on the adiabatic chirp value. In the above example, a rise time and fall time of < 3 Ops is always optimum; and (iii) the rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency can be reduced by increasing the slope in dB/GHz ofthe transmission profile ofthe OSR. Slope of top-hat portion ofthe frequency profile is determined by the dispersion ofthe OSR and provides further dispersion tolerance. Fig. 7 shows another example, where the rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency profile are reduced after the OSR by increasing the slope in dB/GHz of the OSR, here by a factor of 2. In one embodiment of the present invention, the output of a frequency modulated signal is passed through an OSR and the rise time and fall time ofthe frequency profile are reduced by increasing the slope (in dB/GHz) ofthe OSR.
Spectral Narrowing Simultaneous frequency modulation and amplitude modulation with the same digital information reduces the optical bandwidth ofthe signal and suppresses the carrier frequency. This effect is most marked for a chirp value that is λ/ι the bit rate frequency; i.e., 5GHz chirp for 10 Gb/s. This corresponds to the phase change of 0 to π between 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits, i.e., optimum correlation between the phases of the otherwise random bit sequence.
For an approximate range of chirp values between 20% to 80% ofthe bit rate frequency (2-8 GHz for 10 Gb/s bit rate) the carrier is significantly suppressed and the spectrum is narrowed. For 0 value of chirp or for chirp equal to the frequency ofthe bit rate frequency, the carrier is present and the spectrum broadens again. This is because the phase of all the pulses becomes equal for these two cases and the phase correlation is lost. As shown in Fig. 8, the narrowing ofthe spectrum by application of amplitude modulation and frequency modulation narrows the spectrum on the high frequency side. Note that in this
TAYE-31 example the chirp is ~ 7.5 GHz for 10 Gb/s. The spectral position ofthe signal relative to the peak transmission ofthe OSR is adjusted such that the spectrum in on the low frequency edge ofthe OSR. This further reduces the spectral width on the low frequency side. Reducing the spectral bandwidth extends the transmission distance. In one embodiment ofthe present invention the Bandwidth (BW) ofthe OSR is less than the bit rate. The spectrum of a digital signal is determined by the product ofthe spectrum ofthe digital infoπnation and the Fourier transform ofthe pulse shape. Using the correct amount of FM modulation (5 GHz of chirp for 10 Gb/s data rate) which gives a π phase shift between 1 bits separated by odd number of 0 bits as prescribed above, reduces the information BW. In order to increase tolerance to dispersion it is still necessary to reduce the spectrum ofthe pulse shape. This is done by a bandwidth limiting OSR in the preferred embodiment ofthe present invention. Fig. 8 shows that for a given value of adiabatic chirp, the spectral position ofthe signal relative to the peak transmission ofthe OSR can be adjusted to increase the transmission distance. Fig. 8 shows the sensitivity for a 10 Gb/s signal at the transmitter (Back-back) and after propagation through 200 km of fiber having 17ps/nm km of dispersion as a function ofthe spectral shift relative to the OSR. Sensitivity is defined as the average optical power (in dB ) required to achieve a bit error rate of 10"12. The OSR in this example is a 3 cavity etalon. It is therefore an embodiment ofthe present invention to adjust the adiabatic chiφ ofthe frequency modulated source as well as the spectral position ofthe resulting spectrum relative to the OSR in order to achieve a desired bit error rate after propagation through dispersive fiber. Fig. 9 shows an example of an OSR, formed by a non-Gaussian shaped band pass filter. Fig. 9 shows the transmission profile in dB scale as well as the derivative, or frequency dependent slope, ofthe OSR. Fig. 9 also shows the
TAYE-31 spectral position ofthe input FM signal to be reshaped. It is a preferred embodiment ofthe present invention that the optimal spectral position ofthe FM signal on the OSR be such that the Is peak frequency be near the peak logarithmic derivative ofthe transmission profile ofthe OSR. In this example, the derivative is not linear on the dB scale, indicating that the OSR has a non-Gaussian spectral profile. A Gaussian OSR would have a linear slope as a function of frequency. Fig. 9 also shows the position ofthe clock frequency components ofthe input FM signal, which are reduced substantially after the OSR. This in-turn reduces the clock frequency components in the RF spectrum ofthe resulting second signal after the OSR. In this example, the peak slope is 2.7 dB/GHz, and the 3 dB bandwidth ofthe OSR in this case is approximately 8 GHz. It is an embodiment ofthe present invention for the OSR to also reduce the clock frequency components, 10 GHz for a 10 Gb/s NRZ signal, in the RF spectrum ofthe signal resulting after the OSR. The optimum OSR shape is one for which the transmitter has good performance both at its output (Back-to-back) as well as after transmission. The back-to-back performance is determined by having minimum distortion ofthe bits in the eye diagram, while after transmission performance is determined by a low dispersion penalty. As described in U.S. Provisional Patent Applications Serial No. 60/554,243 (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-34 PROV) and 60/629,741 (Attorney's
Docket No. TAYE-48 PROV), which patent applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference, a certain value of filter slope is required to convert an adiabatically chirped input signal to one having flat-topped chirp. It was shown that the OSR converts the first derivative ofthe amplitude ofthe input pulse to blue shifted transient chirp at the edges. For an optimum value of slope the added transient chirp increases the chirp at the edges to produce a nearly flat top chirp. U.S. Provisional Patent Applications Serial No. 60/554,243 (Attorney Docket No. TAYE-34 PROV) and 60/629,741 (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-48
TAYE-31 PROV) disclose that a significant parameter ofthe OSR is the slope of its slope. As defined in the present invention, slope of slope (SoS) is the ratio ofthe peak logarithmic derivative ofthe transmission (in dB/GHz) to the frequency offset of this peak form the transmission peak (in GHz), as illustrated in Fig. 11. In one embodiment of the present invention, the slope of slope of an OSR is adjusted to optimize both the back-to-back transmitter BER and to reduce the BER after fiber transmission. For example, for a 10 Gb/s transmitter good back-to-back eye diagram, as well as low BER after transmission is obtained if the slope of slope is approximately in the range of 0.38 dB/GHz2 to 0.6 dB/GHz2. In addition the slope ofthe OSR near the center ofthe transmission needs to be approximately linear. Deviations from linearity introduce distortions in the resulting output eye diagram and thus cause increased bit error rate. A linear slope corresponds to a round-top shape filter. So, for example, a flat-topped filter, which has a near zero slope near the center is not desirable. The 3 dB band width ofthe band-pass OSR has to be in the range of 65% to 90% ofthe bit rate. Two examples of such OSRs, as shown in Fig. 12, are 2nd order Bessel filters having a 6 GHz or 5.5 GHz band widths. The 2nd order Bessel filter shape is well known to the skilled in the art and is described mathematically by
T{p) = (6) 3 + 3p + p
where j? = 2if/Af3dB . Here Tis the field transmission, /is the optical frequency offset from the center of filter, and Δ/ j is the 3 dB band width ofthe filter. The measured quantity is the optical transmission ofthe filter, which is the absolute square ofthe field transmission in Eq. 6, \T{p)\ and is plotted in Fig. 12. The
Bessel filter is usually used as an electrical low pass filter because it minimizes
TAYE-31 distortion in its pass band. In one embodiment ofthe present invention, the Bessel filter is an optical filter, and it is chosen because it provides the desired slope of slope and linear slope near its peak transmission. The slope of slope for the 2nd order Bessel filter with a 6 GHz bandwidth is 0.46 dB/GHz2, and the slope of slope for the 5.5 GHz bandwidth 2nd order Bessel filter is 0.57 dB/GHz2.
These examples show that the bandwidth ofthe filter can be adjusted to change SoS to be the desired value. Another example of a filter that can be used in accordance with the present invention is a 4th order Bessel filter with a band width of 7.5 GHz, also shown in Fig. 12. This OSR has a slope of slope of 0.41 dB/GHz2. The field transmission ofthe 4th order Bessel filter is given as a function ofthe normalized frequency by 1 T{p) = (7) 15 + 15p + 6p2 +p3 Fig. 13 shows examples of calculated eye diagrams for back-back and' after 200 km of fiber having 3400 ps/nm dispersion. In this example, the 2nd order Bessel filter with 5.5 GHz bandwidth was used. The eye diagrams on the left column are the back-back optical eye (so-called O-eye) of transmitter (top) and the eye transmitted after 200 km (3400 ps/nm). The eye diagrams on the right column are the eye diagrams measured after an optical to electrical converter with a typical ~8 GHz band width, which is called electrical eye (E-eye). The electrical eye is that at the output ofthe receiver, which converts the optical to electrical signal and provides it to the decision circuit for distinguishing the 1 and O bits. A directly modulated laser produces transient chirp, which occurs at the 1 to 0 and 0 to 1 bit transitions, in addition to adiabatic chirp. In a conventional directly modulated laser, transient chiφ is detrimental as it hastens pulse
TAYE-31 distortion and increases BER after transmission. However, in the present invention, it has been found that when used as the FM source, where the directly modulated laser is followed by an OSR, some transient chiφ at the output ofthe laser is desirable. Fig. 14 shows the results of simulation of a transmitter in accordance with the present invention. In this example, the adiabatic chiφ ofthe laser is 4.5 GHz and the OSR is a 2 cavity etalon filter operated near its transmission edge. Fig. 14 shows the eye diagrams of a 10 Gb/s transmitter at its output (back-back), as well as the eye after propagation through 200 km of fiber with 3400 ps/nm dispersion. The transient chiφ at the output ofthe laser, before the
OSR, is either nearly zero (~ 0.2 GHz) (left column) or 2 GHz (right column). Looking at Fig. 14, it is clear that the case having 2 GHz transient chiφ produces a less distorted eye back to back. The eye after 200 km of fiber is also more open and has less inter-symbol interference (ISI) in the case having 2 GHz transient chiφ. It is, therefore, one embodiment ofthe present invention to adjust the transient chiφ ofthe frequency modulated source as well as the slope of slope of the optical spectrum reshaper to obtain the desired transmitter output having minimum distortion and to increase the error free propagation length ofthe transmitter beyond the dispersion limit. In practice, an optical filter such as a multicavity etalon may not have the desired transmission shape and slope of slope. Therefore, in another embodiment ofthe present invention, the angle of incidence and the beam divergence ofthe optical signal impinging upon the filter are adjusted to obtain the desired SoS. Fig. 15 shows an example ofthe measured slope as well as slope ofthe slope as a function of angle of incidence for a 2 cavity etalon. The peak slope initially decreases for increasing angles, reaches a minimum, and then increases again. The increase in slope at large angles is caused by spatial filtering, as described in U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/621,755, filed 10/25/04 by 10/25/04 et
TAYE-31 al. for SPECTRAL RESPONSE MODIFICATION VIA SPATIAL FILTERING WITH OPTICAL FIBER (Attorney's Docket No. TAYE-47 PROV), which patent application is hereby incoφorated herein by reference. For the same range of angles the slope of slope monotonically decreases from 0.75 dB/GHz2 to 0.35 dB/GHz2 because the peak position is increasing with increasing angle. In this example, the optimum value of 0.45 dB/GHz2 is obtained by adjusting the angle of incidence to 1.5 to 2 degrees. In the above described examples, the optical spectrum reshaper (OSR) was a multicavity etalon filter. In another preferred embodiment ofthe present invention the OSR may be an edge filter, as shown in Fig. 16. The edge filter has a substantially flat transmission with frequency over a frequency range and a shaφ edge on one side ofthe peak transmission. The position ofthe first optical signal in this case will be substantially on the slope of transmission. OSR Dispersion The OSR can also provide some dispersion compensation as well as the spectral reshaping. Fig. 17 shows the transmission characteristics of a filter and its corresponding dispersion profile. The filter dispersion can compensate for a portion ofthe fiber dispersion. For example, if the laser frequency spectrum substantially overlaps with the normal dispersion peak, having a negative dispersion, the transmission for a standard single fiber having positive dispersion is extended. If the laser frequency spectrum substantially overlaps with the anomalous dispersion peak, where dispersion is positive, it reduces the transmission distance for a standard fiber with positive dispersion, but extends the reach over negative dispersion fiber such as Dispersion Compensating Fiber (DCF). Fig. 18 shows the sensitivity as a function of fiber distance for a case of an OSR with and without dispersion. The laser spectrum substantially overlaps with the negative dispersion peak ofthe
TAYE-31 OSR. As shown in Fig. 18, the negative distance indicates a fiber having negative dispersion of that length. So, for example, -100 km indicates a 100 km dispersion compensating fiber having -17 ps/nm km dispersion. FM Sources The present invention teaches a variety of methods for generation of a dispersion tolerant FM signal with high extinction ratio (ER). In one preferred embodiment ofthe present invention the FM signal is generated in two steps. First, a base digital signal is chosen to modulate a directly modulated DFB laser so as to generate an FM signal with adiabatic chiφ such that the phase difference between two 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits is an odd integer multiple of π. As an example, for a 10 Gb/s NRZ signal with 100 ps pulses and near square shaped instantaneous frequency profile, this is 5 GHz. Next, the resulting optical signal is sent through a second amplitude modulator, such as a LiNbO3 modulator or an electro-absoφtion modulator, as shown in Fig. 19. The amplitude modulator is modulated by a second digital base signal, which is a replica ofthe first digital base signal. The base signal supplied to the modulator may be inverted relative to that modulating the laser, depending on the transfer function ofthe modulator. This is the case, for example, if a higher signal increases the loss ofthe modulator. Hence, a high signal produces a higher amplitude optical signal from the laser and a corresponding low signal is supplied to the modulator. The AM modulator may be a variety of optical amplitude modulators such as a LiNbO3 modulator, or an electro-absoφtion modulator. The DFB and EA may be integrated on the same chip, as shown in Fig. 20. In one preferred embodiment ofthe present invention, the first and second base signals supplied to the laser and modulator may be adapted to generate FM and AM signals, respectively. These FM and AM signals are different in
TAYE-31 temporal profiles, as demonstrated in Fig. 21, in that there may be a phase difference between the two digital base signals. Also, the rise time and fall time ofthe instantaneous frequency of the first signal and the rise time and fall time of the resulting second signal after the AM modulator may be different. In addition, the durations ofthe FM and AM pulse profiles may be different. In a preferred embodiment ofthe present invention the duration, rise time and fall time, adiabatic chiφ, amplitude modulation depth, and the phase delay between the two digital base signals are varied, as described by the prescriptions and examples above, so as to increase the dispersion tolerance ofthe transmitted signal to fiber dispersion. These parameters for the frequency and amplitude profiles are defined in Fig. 21. In another embodiment ofthe present invention, and as shown in Fig. 22, there may be a bandwidth limiting filter or an OSR placed after the FM/AM source described above. The OSR or filter is chosen so as to reduce the optical frequency components that are at, or higher than, the bit rate frequency, 10 GHz for a 10 Gb/s NRZ signal, for example.
Parameter Ranges In various embodiments ofthe present invention, for longer distance transmission of signal, performance after the optical spectrum reshaper needs to be optimized, leading to the following preferred characteristics: (i) AM ER < 3 dB (i.e., the extinction ratio ofthe laser's intensity output is preferably less than 3 dB in order to minimize transient chiφ); (ii) adiabatic chiφ in the range 2.5-7.5 GHz (i.e., the adiabatic chiφ of the laser's output Δf = fι-f0~ 2.5-7.5 GHz for optimum transmission); and (iii) Optical spectrum reshaper bandwidth is in the range of 5-10 GHz (i.e., the OSR has a filter bandwidth of 5-10 GHz to maximize spectral narrowing effect).
TAYE-31 Modifications It will be appreciated that still further embodiments ofthe present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view ofthe present disclosure. It is to be understood that the present invention is by no means limited to the particular constructions herein disclosed and/or shown in the drawings, but also comprises any modifications or equivalents within the scope ofthe invention.
TAYE-31

Claims

What Is Claimed Is:
1. A fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base binary signal and produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to reshape the first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance ofthe second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber.
2. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that the frequency excursion ofthe second signal is substantially equal to Vi the bit rate frequency of the base digital signal.
3. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal comprises an adiabatic chiφ component.
4. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 3 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal further comprises a transient chiφ component.
5. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 4 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe transient chiφ component ofthe first signal is between about 0% to about 30% ofthe bit rate frequency ofthe base digital signal.
TAYE-31
6. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 4 wherein the bit rate ofthe base digital signal is about 10 Gb/s and the frequency excursion of the transient chiφ component ofthe first signal is about 0 to about 3 GHz.
7. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency profile ofthe second signal is substantially flat-topped.
8. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that the frequency excursion ofthe second signal is between about 25% to about 75% ofthe bit rate frequency of the base digital signal.
9. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that in the second signal, 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are π out of phase.
10. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that in the second signal, 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are between about π/2 to about 3π/2 out of phase.
11. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that the frequency excursion ofthe second signal is substantially equal to an odd integer multiple of
Vz times the bit rate frequency.
TAYE-31
12. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that in the second signal, the phase of 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are an odd integer multiple of π out of phase.
13. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that the product ofthe frequency excursion, (Af), ofthe second signal with the duration ofthe 0 bits of the second signal, To, is substantially equal to an odd integer multiple of Vi.
14. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the extinction ratio ofthe second signal is greater than or equal to about 10 dB.
15. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the extinction ratio ofthe second signal is between about 10 dB to about 13 dB.
16. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal and the duty cycle ofthe second signal are adjusted such that in the second signal, the phase difference between 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits is substantially equal to π.
17. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 16 wherein the frequency profile ofthe second signal is substantially flat-topped.
18. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 16 wherein the frequency profile ofthe first signal is not substantially flat-topped.
19. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the rise time and fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal are faster than the rise time and fall time ofthe amplitude profile ofthe second signal. .
20. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the rise time and fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal are faster than the rise time and fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe first signal.
21. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the rise time of the frequency profile of the second signal is faster than the rise time of the amplitude profile ofthe second signal.
22. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal is faster than the fall time ofthe amplitude profile of the second signal.
23. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the rise time ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal is faster than the rise time ofthe frequency profile of the first signal.
24. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal is faster than the fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe first signal.
25. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the duration ofthe flat-topped portion ofthe frequency profile is wide enough to substantially encompass the amplitude profile ofthe second signal.
TAYE-31
26. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the duration ofthe flat-topped portion ofthe frequency profile encompasses only the middle portion ofthe amplitude profile ofthe second signal.
27. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the middle portion of a 1 bit ofthe second signal has a different frequency than the wing portions ofthe same bit.
28. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the middle portion of the amplitude profile of the second signal has a different frequency than the wing portions on either side ofthe middle portion.
29. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein a 1 bit pulse ofthe second signal has an amplitude profile and a frequency profile, wherein the frequency profile is flat-topped, and further wherein the wings ofthe amplitude profile lie outside the flat-topped portion ofthe frequency profile.
30. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the amplitude profile ofthe second signal is different than its frequency profile.
31. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the duration ofthe flat-topped portion ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal encompasses the central portion ofthe amplitude profile ofthe second signal.
32. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 31 wherein the amplitude profile ofthe second signal comprises wings which have a different frequency than the central portion ofthe amplitude profile ofthe second signal.
TAYE-31
33. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the spectral position ofthe first signal is adjusted to be on the transmission edge of the optical spectrum reshaper.
34. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 33 wherein the spectral position ofthe first signal is substantially near the peak logarithmic derivative ofthe transmission profile ofthe optical spectrum reshaper.
35. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the slope of slope of the optical spectrum reshaper is adjusted to simultaneously optimize the bit error rate ofthe second signal both before and after propagation through dispersive fiber.
36. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 35 wherein the slope of the slope of the optical spectrum reshaper is between about 0.38 dB/GHz2 and about 0.6 dB/GHz2.
37. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the 3 dB bandwidth ofthe optical spectrum reshaper is between about 65% and about 90% of the bit rate of the first signal.
38. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the field transmission profile ofthe optical spectrum reshaper is that of a second order Bessel filter.
39. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the logarithmic slope ofthe transmission profile ofthe optical spectrum reshaper near its transmission peak is substantially linear.
TAYE-31
40. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the field transmission profile ofthe optical spectrum reshaper is that of a fourth order Bessel filter.
41. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the optical signal source is a semiconductor laser.
42. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 41 wherein the bias ofthe laser and the amplitude ofthe base binary signal are adjusted to simultaneously improve the bit error rate ofthe second signal both before and after propagation through dispersive fiber.
43. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 41 wherein the bias ofthe laser and the amplitude ofthe base binary signal are adjusted to improve the bit error rate ofthe second signal after propagation through dispersive fiber.
44. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein at least one ofthe angle of incidence and the beam divergence ofthe first optical signal impinging upon the optical spectrum reshaper is adjusted to obtain the desired second signal.
45. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 44 wherein the angle of incidence is between about 1.5 and about 2 degrees.
46. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the optical spectrum reshaper is a multicavity etalon filter.
TAYE-31
47. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the optical spectrum reshaper is an edge filter.
48. A fiber optic communication system as in claim 1 wherein the rise time and fall time ofthe frequency profile ofthe second signal are adjusted by adjusting the slope (in dB/GHz) ofthe transmission profile ofthe optical spectrum reshaper.
49. An optical transmitter comprising: a frequency modulated source for generating a first frequency modulated signal, and an amplitude modulator for receiving the first frequency modulated signal and for generating a second amplitude and frequency modulated signal.
50. An optical transmitter as in claim 49 wherein the frequency modulated source is modulated with a first digital signal and the amplitude modulator is modulated with a second digital signal.
51. An optical transmitter as in claim 50 wherein the first and second digital signals represent the same digital data.
52. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the first and second digital signals are logical inverses of one another.
53. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the first optical source is a semiconductor laser.
TAYE-31
54. An optical transmitter as in claim 53 wherein the first optical source is a distributed feedback laser.
55. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the amplitude modulator is a lithium niobate modulator.
56. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the amplitude modulator is an electro-absoφtion modulator.
57. An optical transmitter as in claim 54 wherein the amplitude modulator is an electro-absoφtion modulator.
58. An optical transmitter as in claim 57 wherein the distributed feedback laser and the electro-absoφtion modulator are integrated on the same substrate.
59. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein frequency modulated source is modulated by the first digital signal such that in the second signal, the phase difference between two 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits is an odd integer multiple of π.
60. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the frequency modulated source is modulated by the first digital signal such that the frequency excursion ofthe second optical signal is between about 25% and about 75% ofthe bit rate frequency ofthe first digital signal.
TAYE-31
61. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the first frequency modulated signal and second amplitude and frequency modulated signal have different temporal profiles.
62. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein the first digital signal and the digital signal have different temporal profiles.
63. An optical transmitter as in claim 51 wherein at least one ofthe duration, rise time, fall time, adiabatic chiφ, amplitude modulation depth, and the phase delay between the two digital base signals are adjusted so as to increase the dispersion tolerance ofthe second signal to fiber dispersion.
64. An optical transmitter as in claim 49 further comprising an optical spectrum reshaper for receiving the second amplitude and frequency modulated signal.
65. i A method for transmitting an optical signal through a transmission fiber comprising: receiving a base binary signal; operating an optical signal source using the base binary signal to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; passing the frequency modulated signal through an optical spectrum reshaper so as to reshape the first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to increase the tolerance ofthe second signal to dispersion in a transmission fiber; and
TAYE-31 passing the second signal through a transmission fiber.
66. A method according to claim 65 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that the frequency excursion ofthe second signal is substantially equal to Vz the bit rate frequency ofthe base digital signal.
67. A method according to claim 65 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal comprises an adiabatic chiφ component.
68. A method according to claim 65 wherein the frequency profile of the second signal is substantially flat-topped.
69. A method according to claim 65 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that in the second signal, 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are π out of phase.
70. A method according to claim 65 wherein the frequency excursion ofthe first signal is adjusted such that in the second signal, 1 bits separated by an odd number of 0 bits are between about π/2 to about 3π/2 out of phase.
71. A method for transmitting a base signal, comprising: using the base signal to produce a frequency modulated signal; and providing an amplitude modulator for receiving the frequency modulated signal and for generating an amplitude and frequency modulated signal.
72. A fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a frequency modulated signal; and
TAYE-31 an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert the frequency modulated signal into a substantially amplitude modulated signal; characterized in that: the operating characteristics ofthe optical signal source and the optical characteristics ofthe optical spectrum reshaper combine to compensate for at least a portion of a dispersion in an optical fiber.
73. A method for transmitting an amplitude modulated signal through a fiber comprising: providing a laser and providing a filter having selected optical characteristics; inputting the amplitude modulated signal into the laser, and operating the laser, so as to generate a corresponding frequency modulated signal; passing the frequency modulated signal through the filter so as to generate a resulting signal and passing the resulting signal into the fiber; the laser being operated, and the filter being chosen, such that the resulting signal is configured to compensate for at least a portion ofthe dispersion in the fiber.
74. A fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance
TAYE-31 said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
75. A fiber optic communication system comprising: a module adapted to receive a first signal and convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
76. A system adapted to convert a first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; the improvement comprising: tailoring the frequency characteristics of said second signal so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
77. A fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to receive a base signal and produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency characteristics of said first signal, and the optical characteristics of said optical spectrum reshaper, being such that the frequency
TAYE-31 characteristics of said second signal are configured so as to extend the distance said second signal can travel along a fiber before the amplitude characteristics of said second signal degrade beyond a given amount.
78. A fiber optic communication system comprising: an optical signal source adapted to produce a first signal, said first signal being frequency modulated; and an optical spectrum reshaper adapted to convert said first signal into a second signal, said second signal being amplitude modulated and frequency modulated; characterized in that: the frequency dependent loss ofthe optical spectrum reshaper is adjusted to increase the dispersion tolerance ofthe second signal.
79. A fiber optic system comprising: an optical source adapted to produce a frequency modulated digital signal; characterized in that: said digital signal has a time varying frequency modulation which is substantially constant across each 1 bit and equal to a first frequency and substantially constant over each 0 bit and equal to a second frequency, wherein the difference between said first frequency and said second frequency is between 0.2 times and 1.0 times the bit rate frequency.
80. A method for generating a dispersion tolerant digital signal, comprising: modulating a DFB laser with a first digital base signal to generate a first optical FM signal,
TAYE-31 wherein said first FM signal has a π phase shift between 1 bits that are separated by an odd number of 0 bits, and modulating amplitude of said first optical FM signal with a second digital base signal to produce a second optical signal with high contrast ratio.
TAYE-31
PCT/US2005/006412 2004-02-27 2005-02-28 Fm source and spectral reshaping element WO2005084268A2 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP2007500803A JP4584304B2 (en) 2004-02-27 2005-02-28 Optical system with FM source and spectrum shaping element
EP05724041.8A EP1738504A4 (en) 2004-02-27 2005-02-28 Optical system comprising an fm source and a spectral reshaping element
CA002557150A CA2557150A1 (en) 2004-02-27 2005-02-28 Optical system comprising an fm source and a spectral reshaping element
CN2005800127054A CN101073210B (en) 2004-02-27 2005-02-28 Optical system including FM source and optical spectrum reshaper

Applications Claiming Priority (16)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US54823004P 2004-02-27 2004-02-27
US60/548,230 2004-02-27
US55424304P 2004-03-18 2004-03-18
US60/554,243 2004-03-18
US56606004P 2004-04-28 2004-04-28
US60/566,060 2004-04-28
US56773704P 2004-05-03 2004-05-03
US60/567,737 2004-05-03
US56976904P 2004-05-10 2004-05-10
US56976804P 2004-05-10 2004-05-10
US60/569,769 2004-05-10
US60/569,768 2004-05-10
US62175504P 2004-10-25 2004-10-25
US60/621,755 2004-10-25
US62974104P 2004-11-19 2004-11-19
US60/629,741 2004-11-19

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2005084268A2 true WO2005084268A2 (en) 2005-09-15
WO2005084268A3 WO2005084268A3 (en) 2007-02-01

Family

ID=34923591

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2005/006412 WO2005084268A2 (en) 2004-02-27 2005-02-28 Fm source and spectral reshaping element

Country Status (5)

Country Link
EP (1) EP1738504A4 (en)
JP (1) JP4584304B2 (en)
CN (1) CN101073210B (en)
CA (1) CA2557150A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2005084268A2 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2007099165A2 (en) * 2006-03-03 2007-09-07 Nokia Siemens Networks Gmbh & Co. Kg Modulator device for generating an optical transfer signal modulated by means of a binary signal
EP2161798A1 (en) * 2007-06-25 2010-03-10 Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation Optical modulation signal generation device and optical modulation signal generation method
US9628192B2 (en) 2014-10-30 2017-04-18 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Optical transmitter, wavelength alignment method, and passive optical network system

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP5182058B2 (en) * 2008-12-16 2013-04-10 富士通株式会社 WDM optical transmission method and WDM optical transmission system
US8340531B2 (en) * 2009-12-18 2012-12-25 General Instrument Corporation Method and apparatus for improved SBS suppression in optical fiber communication systems
CN102780529B (en) * 2012-07-13 2015-09-30 青岛海信宽带多媒体技术有限公司 EPON and optical line terminal optical module thereof
CN107431540A (en) * 2015-03-27 2017-12-01 日本电气株式会社 Optics receiving device
CN106792281B (en) * 2015-11-20 2019-09-24 上海诺基亚贝尔股份有限公司 Optical line terminal and optical network unit
CN108321675B (en) * 2018-04-10 2019-12-17 青岛海信宽带多媒体技术有限公司 laser and optical module
WO2020057720A1 (en) * 2018-09-17 2020-03-26 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. High power and high quality laser system and method

Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2107147A (en) 1981-09-03 1983-04-20 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Optical requency modulation system
GB2237469A (en) 1989-10-24 1991-05-01 Stc Plc Optical transmission process and system
US5371625A (en) 1992-02-01 1994-12-06 Alcatel N.V. System for optically transmitting digital communications over an optical fiber with dispersion at the operating wavelength
US6104851A (en) 1998-04-24 2000-08-15 Mahgerefteh; Daniel Transmission system comprising a semiconductor laser and a fiber grating discriminator
US6331991B1 (en) 1998-07-17 2001-12-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The National Security Agency Transmission system using a semiconductor laser and a fiber grating discriminator
US6486986B1 (en) 1998-10-14 2002-11-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. System for optically transmitting frequency-division-multiplexed signal and transmitter therefor
US20040008937A1 (en) 2002-07-09 2004-01-15 Daniel Mahgerefteh Power source for a dispersion compensation fiber optic system
EP1569367A2 (en) 2004-02-26 2005-08-31 Fujitsu Limited Optical device for optical communication
WO2005092041A2 (en) 2004-03-18 2005-10-06 Azna Llc Method and apparatus for transmitting a signal using simultaneous fm and am modulation

Family Cites Families (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS62189832A (en) * 1986-02-17 1987-08-19 Nec Corp Optical transmitter
JP2776124B2 (en) * 1992-03-23 1998-07-16 日本電気株式会社 Direct detection light receiver
DE4234599A1 (en) * 1992-08-22 1994-02-24 Sel Alcatel Ag Optical transmitter
JP2966294B2 (en) * 1994-09-12 1999-10-25 ケイディディ株式会社 Optical transmission system
JP3242332B2 (en) * 1996-10-17 2001-12-25 住友大阪セメント株式会社 Optical demultiplexer
US6081361A (en) * 1997-10-17 2000-06-27 Lucent Technologies Inc. Sub-carrier multiplexing in broadband optical networks
JP4141028B2 (en) * 1998-11-25 2008-08-27 富士通株式会社 Code conversion circuit for optical duobinary transmission, and optical transmitter and optical receiver using the same
US6473214B1 (en) * 1999-04-01 2002-10-29 Nortel Networks Limited Methods of and apparatus for optical signal transmission
WO2002012952A2 (en) * 2000-08-04 2002-02-14 Evankow Joseph David Jr Apparatus for polarization-independent optical polarization scrambler and a method for use therein
JP2002072108A (en) * 2000-08-31 2002-03-12 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd Variable wavelength demultiplexer
EP1235403B1 (en) * 2001-02-22 2012-12-05 Panasonic Corporation Combined frequency and amplitude modulation
US7663762B2 (en) * 2002-07-09 2010-02-16 Finisar Corporation High-speed transmission system comprising a coupled multi-cavity optical discriminator

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2107147A (en) 1981-09-03 1983-04-20 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Optical requency modulation system
GB2237469A (en) 1989-10-24 1991-05-01 Stc Plc Optical transmission process and system
US5371625A (en) 1992-02-01 1994-12-06 Alcatel N.V. System for optically transmitting digital communications over an optical fiber with dispersion at the operating wavelength
US6104851A (en) 1998-04-24 2000-08-15 Mahgerefteh; Daniel Transmission system comprising a semiconductor laser and a fiber grating discriminator
US6331991B1 (en) 1998-07-17 2001-12-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The National Security Agency Transmission system using a semiconductor laser and a fiber grating discriminator
US6486986B1 (en) 1998-10-14 2002-11-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. System for optically transmitting frequency-division-multiplexed signal and transmitter therefor
US20040008937A1 (en) 2002-07-09 2004-01-15 Daniel Mahgerefteh Power source for a dispersion compensation fiber optic system
EP1569367A2 (en) 2004-02-26 2005-08-31 Fujitsu Limited Optical device for optical communication
WO2005092041A2 (en) 2004-03-18 2005-10-06 Azna Llc Method and apparatus for transmitting a signal using simultaneous fm and am modulation

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
KIKUCHI K ET AL.: "In-Service Dispersion Monitoring in 32 x 10.7 Gbps WDM Transmission System Over Transatlantic Distance Using Optical Frequency-Modulation Method", JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY,, vol. 22, no. 1, - 1 January 2004 (2004-01-01), pages 257 - 265, XP011107643, ISSN: 0733-8724
See also references of EP1738504A4

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2007099165A2 (en) * 2006-03-03 2007-09-07 Nokia Siemens Networks Gmbh & Co. Kg Modulator device for generating an optical transfer signal modulated by means of a binary signal
WO2007099165A3 (en) * 2006-03-03 2007-11-15 Siemens Ag Modulator device for generating an optical transfer signal modulated by means of a binary signal
US7876852B2 (en) 2006-03-03 2011-01-25 Nokia Siemens Networks Gmbh & Co. Kg Modulator device for generating an optical transfer signal modulated by binary signal
CN101395827B (en) * 2006-03-03 2013-01-16 诺基亚西门子通信有限责任两合公司 Modulator device for generating an optical transfer signal modulated by means of a binary signal
EP2161798A1 (en) * 2007-06-25 2010-03-10 Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation Optical modulation signal generation device and optical modulation signal generation method
EP2161798A4 (en) * 2007-06-25 2014-01-08 Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Optical modulation signal generation device and optical modulation signal generation method
US9628192B2 (en) 2014-10-30 2017-04-18 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Optical transmitter, wavelength alignment method, and passive optical network system

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2557150A1 (en) 2005-09-15
EP1738504A2 (en) 2007-01-03
CN101073210A (en) 2007-11-14
CN101073210B (en) 2013-04-17
EP1738504A4 (en) 2017-04-19
WO2005084268A3 (en) 2007-02-01
JP2007525909A (en) 2007-09-06
JP4584304B2 (en) 2010-11-17

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7555225B2 (en) Optical system comprising an FM source and a spectral reshaping element
US7809280B2 (en) Chirp-managed, electroabsorption-modulated laser
US7406266B2 (en) Flat-topped chirp induced by optical filter edge
WO2005084268A2 (en) Fm source and spectral reshaping element
US20060029397A1 (en) Method and apparatus for transmitting a signal using simultaneous FM and AM modulation
EP0977382B1 (en) Optical transmission system
US7542683B2 (en) Chirp Managed Laser (CML) transmitter
US7474859B2 (en) Versatile compact transmitter for generation of advanced modulation formats
US20050271392A1 (en) Reach extension by using external bragg grating for spectral filtering
EP1424795B1 (en) Optical transmission system using optical phase modulator
EP2154800A1 (en) Dispersin tolerant optical system and method thereof
US20020167703A1 (en) Tandem filters for reducing intersymbol interference in optical communications systems
KR100480283B1 (en) Duobinary optical transmitter
JP3900874B2 (en) Optical transmitter and optical modulation method
WO2008024326A2 (en) Chirp-managed, electroabsorption-modulated laser
WO2009124471A1 (en) Methods and systems for optical communication
US7509056B2 (en) Method and system for generating CS-RZ pulses showing narrow width of bit duration
WO2005092041A2 (en) Method and apparatus for transmitting a signal using simultaneous fm and am modulation
Mahgerefteh et al. Chirp Managed Laser (CML): A compact transmitter for dispersion tolerant 10Gb/s networking applications
Prat et al. Reduction of laser modulation bandwidth requirement in FSK systems using duobinary coding and differential detection
JP4750205B2 (en) System and method for generating a zero return differential phase shift modulation (RZ-DPSK) optical signal
Hodzic et al. Modulation formats for robust WDM 40-Gb/s transmission systems

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A2

Designated state(s): AE AG AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BW BY BZ CA CH CN CO CR CU CZ DE DK DM DZ EC EE EG 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 NA NI NO NZ OM PG PH PL PT RO RU SC SD SE SG SK SL SM SY 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: A2

Designated state(s): BW GH GM KE LS MW MZ NA 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 HU IE IS IT LT LU MC NL PL PT RO SE SI SK TR BF BJ CF CG CI CM GA GN GQ GW ML MR NE SN TD TG

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2557150

Country of ref document: CA

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2007500803

Country of ref document: JP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2005724041

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 200580012705.4

Country of ref document: CN

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 2005724041

Country of ref document: EP