046342 Lecture I ver. 3 Introduction to Fiber Optic Communication in which we present a roadmap for the course …an overview of optical transmission, …then proceed to review some elements of signal analysis …then review Electro-Magnetic Theory, …and guided wave optics … L1 map • Admin, Roadmap, References • Overview of Optical Communication • Elements of signal analysis – narrowband signal representations • Elements of electro-magnetic wave propagation • Guided Optics: • Solving the wave equation for cylindrical step index fibers – self-study Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 2 Admin, Roadmap 3 מבוא לתקשורת בסיבים אופטיים grad/undergrad course #046342 - Spring 2010 • Lecturer: Prof. Moshe Nazarathy משה נצרתי • • • • • Moshe’s reception hours: Tue 12:30-14:20 room 755 office phone ext. 3917 nazarat@ee.technion.ac.il TA: Alex Tolmachev Grading: HW+FINAL EXAM Homework will be submitted by pairs of students. - Homeworks will represent 15% of the final grade. During the semester 9 homeworks will be assigned and the homework grade will be based on the 6 best grades. 2 out of the 9 homeworks will include computer exercises the submission of which is mandatory. • Prerequisite: 044148 “”גלים ומערכות מפולגות – Ideal (optional) prerequisites: Signals and Systems, Random Signals, Analog and Digital Communication Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 4 • References: – Moshe’s class and lecture notes (.ppt) on the “Moodle” website: http://moodle.technion.ac.il/ – L. Kazovsky, S. Benedetto, A. Willner, Optical Fiber Communication Systems, Artech House, 1996. – Gagliardi & Karp, Optical Communications, 2nd edition, Wiley, 1995 (also 1st edition OK). – J. Buck, Fundamentals of Optical Fibers, Wiley, 2004. – Okoshi&Kikuchi, Coherent Optical Fiber Communications, KTK, 1988. – J.W. Goodman, Statistical Optics, Wiley, 1985. – Papers from professional literature Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 5 Roadmap of 048951 (MAIN LECTURES) : L1. L2. L3. L4. L5. L6. L7. L8. L9. Subject to Change Overview of optical communication, review complex signals ,E-M, guided optics Elements of Linear Propagation and Nonlinear Optics Nonlinear Schroedinger Equation Nonlinear impairments The Photon Nature of Light + Direct Optical Detection Optical Modulation Optical Amplification Polarization Mode Dispersion Wavelength Division Multiplexed Direct Detection Systems Coherent and Differentially Coherent Transmission .L10. .L11. .L12. 6 Moshe Nazarathy - All Rights Reserved Acknowledgements: •P. Winzer, C. Chandrasekhar, ECOC’05, whose kind permission I was granted to incorporate their notes into my current course. •A. Mecozzi and M. Shtaif also granted me kind permission to incorporate their notes from ECOC’05. •Prof. G. Eisenstein the previous teacher of this course for his course notes We are going to greatly benefit from these great materials 8 Overview of optical communication From meters to thousands of Kms, from Mb/s to multi Tb/s 9 History (+basic TIR principle) In the 19th century …. In 1870, John Tyndall, using a jet of water that flowed from one container to another and a beam of light, demonstrated that light used internal reflection to follow a specific path. As water poured out through the spout of the first container, Tyndall directed a beam of sunlight at the path of the water. The light, as seen by the audience, followed a zigzag path inside the curved path of the water. This simple experiment, illustrated in the figure below, marked the first research into the guided transmission of light. Light is kept in the fiber core by TOTAL INTERNAL REFLECTION (TIR) In the wave picture the fiber acts as a waveguide SiO 2 k0n2 sin 2 k0n1 sin 1 Equal tangential k-components GeO 2 doped sin TIR n1 / n2 10 …and the rest of the story [Wiki] History • In 1966 Charles K. Kao and George Hockham proposed optical fibers at STC Laboratories (STL), Harlow, when they showed that the losses of 1000 db/km in existing glass (compared to 5-10 db/km in coaxial cable) was due to contaminants, which could potentially be removed. • Optical fiber was successfully developed in 1970 by Corning Glass Works, with attenuation low enough for communication purposes (about 20dB/km), and at the same time GaAs semiconductor lasers were developed that were compact and therefore suitable for transmitting light through fiber optic cables for long distances. • After a period of research starting from 1975, the first commercial fiber-optic communications system was developed, which operated at a wavelength around 0.8 µm and used GaAs semiconductor lasers. This first-generation system operated at a bit rate of 45 Mbps with repeater spacing of up to 10 km. Soon on 22 April, 1977, General Telephone and Electronics sent the first live telephone traffic through fiber optics at a 6 Mbps throughput in Long Beach, California. • The second generation of fiber-optic communication was developed for commercial use in the early 1980s, operated at 1.3 µm, and used InGaAsP semiconductor lasers. Although these systems were initially limited by dispersion, in 1981 the single-mode fiber was revealed to greatly improve system performance. By 1987, these systems were operating at bit rates of up to 1.7 Gb/s with repeater spacing up to 50 km. • The first transatlantic telephone cable to use optical fiber was TAT-8, based on Desurvire optimized laser amplification technology. It went into operation in 1988. • Third-generation fiber-optic systems operated at 1.55 µm and had losses of about 0.2 dB/km. They achieved this despite earlier difficulties with pulse-spreading at that wavelength using conventional InGaAsP semiconductor lasers. Scientists overcame this difficulty by using dispersion-shifted fibers designed to have minimal dispersion at 1.55 µm or by limiting the laser spectrum to a single longitudinal mode. These developments eventually allowed third-generation systems to operate commercially at 2.5 Gbit/s with repeater spacing in excess of 100 km. • The fourth generation of fiber-optic communication systems used optical amplification to reduce the need for repeaters and wavelengthdivision multiplexing to increase data capacity. These two improvements caused a revolution that resulted in the doubling of system capacity every 6 months starting in 1992 until a bit rate of 10 Tb/s was reached by 2001. Recently, bit-rates of up to 14 Tbit/s have been reached over a single 160 km line using optical amplifiers. • The focus of development for the fifth generation of fiber-optic communications is <<here Wiki gets it wrong – deleted>>. • In the late 1990s through 2000, industry promoters, and research companies such predicted vast increases in demand for communications bandwidth due to increased use of the Internet, and commercialization of various bandwidth-intensive consumer services, such as video on demand. Internet protocol data traffic was increasing exponentially, at a faster rate than integrated circuit complexity had increased under Moore's Law. From the bust of the dot-com bubble through 2006, however, the main trend in the industry has been consolidation of firms and offshoring of manufacturing to reduce costs. Recently, companies such as Verizon and AT&T have taken advantage of fiber-optic communications to deliver a variety of high-throughput data and broadband services to consumers' homes. Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 11 Why Optical Communication? Current Economic Motivation Initial motivation was telephony תעבורה PB/Month 20K Source: CISCO Networking Report Q1/09 גידול בשנה60% 1.65 = 10.49 10K 100 2006 2009 2012 12 Overview of photonic transmission Impairments - I 13 קילקולים IMPAIRMENTS LOSS NOISE SOURCES RX+OA dependent TX Power Optical Signal/Noise ובמבנה מוליך הגל ((נפיצה CHROMATIC DISPERSION (CD) Pulse spreadingISIBER נפיצת אופני קיטוב היא מעוותת את האות POLARIZATION MODE DISPERSION 14 NON-LINEARITY ליניאריות – גם- איGets worse with TX power Fiber loss spectrum FIRST WINDOW: 800 to 900 nm (GaAs lasers, MMF) SECOND WINDOW (low CD): 1260 to 1360 nm (InGaAsP lasers, SMF) THIRD WINDOW (low Loss): Conventional, or C-band: ~1525 nm - 1565 nm, Long, or L-band: 1570 nm to 1610 nm.. Charles K. Kao working with fiber optics at the Standard Telecommunication Laboratories in England in the 1960s. 16 self-study Substantially reducing fiber loss is what made fiber-optical communication possible • • • • The masters of light: This year's (2009) Nobel Prize in Physics is awarded for two scientific achievements that have helped to shape the foundations of today’s networked societies. They have created many practical innovations for everyday life and provided new tools for scientific exploration. In 1966, Charles K. Kao made a discovery that led to a breakthrough in fiber optics. He carefully calculated how to transmit light over long distances via optical glass fibers. With a fiber of purest glass it would be possible to transmit light signals over 100 kilometers, compared to only 20 meters for the fibers available in the 1960s. Kao's enthusiasm inspired other researchers to share his vision of the future potential of fiber optics. The first ultrapure fiber was successfully fabricated just four years later, in 1970. Today optical fibers make up the circulatory system that nourishes our communication society. These low-loss glass fibers facilitate global broadband communication such as the Internet. Light flows in thin threads of glass, and it carries almost all of the telephony and data traffic in each and every direction. Text, music, images and video can be transferred around the globe in a split second. If we were to unravel all of the glass fibers that wind around the globe, we would get a single thread over one billion kilometers long – which is enough to encircle the globe more than 25 000 times – and is increasing by thousands of kilometers every hour. Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 17 Loss mechanisms • Intrinsic losses (fundamental to the glass material – wavelength and material composition dependent): – Si02 absorption resonances with tails extending in the communication wavelength range with peaks located at UV (0.1um electronic origin) and mid IR (lattice vibrational modes, at 7 and 11um) – Rayleigh scattering (excitation and re-radiation of light by atomic dipoles of dimensions much smaller than a wavelength) – only excited due to irregularities of the atomic structure – rapid random variations in the density, hence in the refractive index of the glass and of dopant materials introduced into the Si02 lattice structure • Extrinsic losses (impurities, structural imperfections): – Metallic and Rare Earth Impurities (V, Cr, Ni, Mn, Cu, Fe – Er, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Tb, Dy) – must be kept to concentration levels to few parts per billion by the vapor-phase processing technologies. – OH (hydroxil group) losses – OH may enter in the fabrication process – OH resonates between 2.7 and 3.0 um – the OH vibrational modes are slightly anharmonic, generating intermodulation tones at 1.38 um (2nd harmonic) and 0.95 um (3rd harmonic). There is also a sideband at 1.25 um from the coupling of the 2nd harmonic with the fundamental Si-O vibrational resonance. • Bending losses: – Macrobending - curved guiding fiber bent into a loop – Microbending - when the fiber comes in contact with rough surface, or small random axial deformations, fluctuations in the core radius) – all random along z. Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 18 Fiber Loss spectrum – with individual loss mechanisms [J. Buck, Fundamentals of Optical Fibers] Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 19 Fiber dispersion Pulse Broadening InterSymbol Interference (ISI)degraded Bit Error Rate (BER) CDPulse Broadening (Animation) 1, 1, 0 FIBER WITH CHROMATIC DISPERSION (CD) 1, 1, 1 “Different colors (wavelengths) travel at different velocities” Pulse BroadeningISIBER THRESHOLD 1, 0, 0 1, 1, 0 Note: The ISI effect is complex: Sometimes the tail (RX response to a single pulse), may last even longer than a single pulse slot (bit duration), and several such tails from a few past symbols may superpose in any given bit interval (the details depend on the transmitted bit sequence, the basic transmitter pulse, the fiber channel CD, and the RX electrical response) 20 Fiber dispersion spectrum Pulse spread [ps] is proportional to distance [Km] and to light bandwidth [nm]: DL The proportionality constant called Dispersion Parameter, D, is plotted below: d ( g / L) psec/km D d nm @1.3um, standard fiber is ideally CD-free (but is lossier) @1.5um, standard fiber has large CD (but has lowest loss) 21 Higher power > The CD induced broadening is a larger percentage of the shorter pulses at higher bitrate 22 Overview of Optical Amplification and Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) 23 ERBIUM DOPED FIBER AMPLIFIER (EDFA) An optical amplifier is a device that amplifies an optical signal directly, without the need to first convert it to an electrical signal. An optical amplifier may be thought of as a laser without an optical cavity, or one in which feedback from the cavity is suppressed. Stimulated emission in the amplifier's gain medium causes amplification of incoming light. [WIKI] Optical gain in the 1,550 nm region. 980 or 1,480 nm 24 Self-study Doped fibre amplifiers (DFAs) are optical amplifiers that use a doped optical fibre as a gain medium to amplify an optical signal. The signal to be amplified and a pump laser are multiplexed into the doped fibre, and the signal is amplified through interaction with the doping ions. The most common example is the Erbium Doped Fiber Amplifier (EDFA), where the core of a silica fiber is doped with trivalent Erbium ions and can be efficiently pumped with a laser at a wavelength of 980 nm or 1,480 nm, and exhibits gain in the 1,550 nm region. Amplification is achieved by stimulated emission of photons from dopant ions in the doped fibre. The pump laser excites ions into a higher energy from where they can decay via stimulated emission of a photon at the signal wavelength back to a lower energy level. The excited ions can also decay spontaneously (spontaneous emission) or even through nonradiative processes involving interactions with phonons of the glass matrix. The amplification window of an optical amplifier is the range of optical wavelengths for which the amplifier yields a usable gain. The amplification window is determined by the spectroscopic properties of the dopant ions, the glass structure of the optical fibre, and the wavelength and power of the pump laser. Although the electronic transitions of an isolated ion are very well defined, broadening of the energy levels occurs when the ions are incorporated into the glass of the optical fibre and thus the amplification window is also broadened. The broad gain-bandwidth of fibre amplifiers make them particularly useful in wavelength-division multiplexed communications systems as a single amplifier can be utilized to amplify all signals being carried on a fiber and whose wavelengths fall within the gain window. Noise: The principal source of noise in DFAs is Amplified Spontaneous Emission (ASE), which has a spectrum approximately the same as the gain spectrum of the amplifier. As well as decaying via stimulated emission, electrons in the upper energy level can also decay by spontaneous emission, which occurs at random, depending upon the glass structure and inversion level. Photons are emitted spontaneously in all directions, but a proportion of those will be emitted in a direction that falls within the numerical aperture of the fibre and are thus captured and guided by the fibre. Those photons captured may then interact with other dopant ions, and are thus amplified by stimulated emission. Gain saturation: Gain is achieved in a DFA due to population inversion of the dopant ions. The inversion level of a DFA is set, primarily, by the power of the pump wavelength and the power at the amplified wavelengths. As the signal power increases, or the pump power decreases, the inversion level will reduce and thereby the gain of the amplifier will be reduced. This effect is known as gain saturation - as the signal level increases, the amplifier saturates and cannot produce any more output power, and therefore the gain reduces. Saturation is also commonly known as gain compression. EDFAs have two commonly-used pumping bands - 980 nm and 1480 nm. The 980 nm band has a higher absorption cross-section and is generally used where low-noise performance is required. The absorption band is relatively narrow and so wavelength stabilised laser sources are typically needed. The 1480 nm band has a lower, but broader, absorption cross-section and is generally used for higher power amplifiers. A combination of 980 nm and 1480 nm pumping is generally utilised in amplifiers. [WIKI] Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 25 Fiber links evolution 26 Overview of photonic transmission Impairments - II 27 Linear Impairments 28 29 A 30 MULTIPLEXING ריבוב In order to increase the capacity beyond the single channel limit use Multiplexing in either time domain (OTDM) or wavelength domain (WDM) Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) WDM is the optical equivalent of FDM: Frequency Division Multiplexing (e.g. as used in Terrestrial Broadcast and Cable Television) WDM became the most important development of the ‘90ies which enabled the Internet – in turn DWDM was enabled by the emergence of broadband optical amplifiers in the late ’80ies. 31 32 33 DWDM Systems Current… …Soon 34 24 very wide (~350 GHz) WDM channels launched over the C- and L-bands Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 35 f c/ 36 Modern DWDM Core Network Tx=Transmitter Rx=Receiver pre= opt. preamp NF= Noise Figure ROADM= Reconfig. Opt. Add Drop Mux post = opt. post-amp 37 An elementary introduction to AM radio From Lecture I gave to 2nd semester students in the 1 point course “Directions in Electrical Engineering” Analog Communication background The concept of modulation and demodulation ESSENTIAL BACKGROUND FOR COHERENT DETECTION “The communication technology of a sufficiently advanced civilization is indistinguishable from magic” Modulation-Demodulation • Modulation: (at the TX) Alteration of one waveform (the “carrier”) according to the characteristics of another waveform (the “message”) The “modulated carrier” is an information-bearing waveform best suited for transmission over the channel. • Demodulation: (at the RX) Extraction of the “message” out of the modulated carrier. • Continuous-wave (CW) modulation systems: – LINEAR MODULATION (direct freq. translation of message spectrum) • Amplitude Modulation (AM) -alternatively called DSB-LC (Large Carrier) • Double-Sideband (DSB) -alternatively called DSB-SC (Suppressed Carrier) • Single Sideband Modulation (SSB) • Vestigial Sideband (VSB) – NON-LINEAR MODULATION (Exponential) recovered “modulated carrier” • FM “message” “message” • PM TX RX (audio) Channel (mod) (demod) (RF) “carrier” Local oscillator “carrier” 40 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright AM Modulation () אפנון cos(2 f 0t ) X (t ) X (t ) Y (t ) 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 3 0.5 -1 cos(2 f0t ) 2.5 -0.5 2 -0.5 1.5 -1 1 0.5 1 0.5 1 cos(t ) 0.5 -1 -0.5 -0.5 -1 Y (t ) 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 -1 -0.5 0.5 -0.5 -1 1 Q: Why bother with trigo in highschool? A: To understand AM radio @Technion, dummy! cos cos .... ... 1 1 cos cos 2 2 cos ( ) ... 2 1 1 cos(2 ) 2 2 AM modulation f v 400 Hz R (t ) V (t ) A cos(2 f c t ) Transmitter V (t ) 1 m cos(2 f vt ) R(t ) 1 m cos(2 fvt ) A cos(2 f ct ) A cos(2 f ct ) mA cos(2 f vt ) cos(2 f ct ) A cos(2 f c t ) mA cos 2 2 mA cos 2 2 fc f v t fc f v t f c 100 KHz AM modulation R (t ) V (t ) A cos(2 f ct ) f v 400 Hz f0 100 KHz Transmitter V (t ) 1 m cos(2 f vt ) R (t ) A cos(2 f c t ) mA cos 2 f c f v t 2 mA cos 2 f c f v t 2 Spectrum of V ( t ) A mA 2 Spectrum R (t ) of mA 2 Freq. 0.3 0.4 0.5 100.4 99.6 100 [ KHz ] Single Tone amplitude modulated (AM) signal Spectrum of AM signals fc W fc fc W Complete AM radio link R (t ) V (t ) 3 2.5 2 cos(2 f ct ) 3 2.5 2 1.5 1.5 1 0.5 -1 -0.5 0.5 1 -0.5 -1 1 0.5 -1 -0.5 0.5 1 -0.5 Transmitter -1 aR (t ) W (t ) cos(2 f ct ) Receiver Low-Pass FILTER 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 -1 -0.5 0.5 -0.5 -1 1 Complete AM DSB radio link R (t ) V (t ) 3 2.5 cos(2 f ct ) 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 2 1.5 1 0.5 -1 -0.5 0.5 -0.5 -1 0.5 -1 -0.5 0.5 1 -0.5 Transmitter -1 V (t ) cos(2 f ct ) R(t ) aR ( t ) Low-Pass FILTER W (t ) cos(2 f ct ) Receiver W (t ) aR(t ) cos(2 f ct ) aV (t ) cos(2 f ct ) cos(2 f ct ) aV (t ) cos (2 f c t ) 2 1 1 aV (t ) cos(2 2 f c t ) 2 2 2 a a V (t ) V (t ) cos(2 2 f c t ) 2 2 a V (t ) 2 1 Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA) CH. 1 TX CH. 2 TX Upconverter Downconverter x LPF x cos 2f1t cos 2f1t Upconverter Downconverter x LPF x cos 2f2t analog medium ... Upconverter Downconverter x LPF x cos 2fNt cos 2f1t FDM DEMUX CH. N CH. 2 CH. 1 FDM MUX FDMA CH. 2 RX cos 2f1t ... CH. N TX CH. 1 RX ... CH. N RX Brief preview of the next generation: Coherent Detection with Digital Signal Processing (DSP) 50 The photo-diode acts as a mixer: i (t ) Etot 2 Er E LO 2 Er E LO 2 Er E LO 2 2 Mixing term COHERENT OPTICAL TRANSMISSION Er LO laser ELO A revolution akin to the transition from spark radio to (super)heterodyne radio [Armstrong, 1918] mixer r Tunable LO Differential Phase Shift Keying (DPSK) IF IF cos r t cos LO t 12 cos r LO t 12 cos r LO t LO 51 52 Signal analysis background: Representations of narrowband signals and systems: -Complex envelopes, analytic signals Quadrature (I&Q) Components 53 Analytic signals, complex envelopes, in the time & freq. domains Real sig. Analytic sig. Analytic sig. y(t ) 2 Re ya (t ) 2 Re y (t )e j t c y ( t ) ya (t )e ya ( t ) y ( t )e Analytic sig. jc t Cmplx carrier Env. harmonic tone Y ( ) Ya ( vc ) Shift vc Ya ( ) Ya ( ) Y ( vc ) Shift vc Y ( ) Y ( ) Shift vc 2u( )Y ( ) y (t ) (analytic) downconverter Moshe Nazarathy Copyright c 0 Ya ( ) 2u( )Y ( ) Cmplx Env. jct c 2u( ) PHASE SPLITTER ya ( t ) e j0t y (t ) 54 Passband analog transmission and quadrature representations xI t 2cos 2π t 0 2cos 2πν t 0 LPF xI t x(t ) xQ t - 2sin 2π 0t Narrowband real signal QUADRATURE SYNTHESIZER (MODULATOR) Quadrature x(t )= - 2sin 2πν0t LPF xQ t QUADRATURE ANALYZER (DEMODULATOR) representation of narrowband signal: 2 xI (t )cos 2 0t - 2 xQ (t ) sin 2 0t = 2Re xI (t ) jxQ (t ) cos 2 0t +jsin 2 0t 2 Re x(t )e j 2 0t LP sig. (analytic) upconverter (CE) xa (t ) x(t ) e j0t Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 2 Re{} LP sig. BP real sig. (analytic) downconverter (CE) x(t ) Reversible Transformations 2u( ) a x (t ) PHASE SPLITTER e j0t x(t ) 55 Quadrature and env/phase representations of narrowband signals x (t ) xI (t ) 2 cos 0t xQ (t ) 2 sin 0t xenv (t ) cos ct (t ) QUADRATURE MOD 2cos 2π xCX(tt ) t 0 C 2sin 2π t 0 Re x(t )e j0t Q-comp. sin 0t Im x(t ) XS t x S (t ) xQ x(t ) xenv / 2 (t ) xI xa (t ) x(t )e j0t x(t ) 2 Re e j0t x(t ) xI (t ) jxQ (t ) analytic sig. cmplx env. x ( t ) xenv (t ) 2 x(t ) Re I-comp. cos 0t (t ) x(t ) xa (t ) x(t ) e j ( t ) x (t ) 2 Re xI (t ) jxQ (t ) e j0t 2 Re xI (t ) jxQ (t ) (cos 0t j sin 0t ) xI (t ) 2 cos 0t xQ (t ) 2 sin 0t 2 x(t ) cos 0t (t ) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 56 Analog quadrature BP Link – complex representation s (t ) a s (t ) s (t ) S ( ) e 2 Re{} s (t ) BPF j0t N (t ) S ( ) analytic U/C 0 0 0 2u ( ) PHASE SPLITTER 0 PHASE SPLITTER 0 0 DEMOD e j0t Self-study LPF sˆ(t ) optional analytic D/C S ( ) Assume an ideal BPF channel and no noise output: sa (t ) s (t ) 0 s(t )e j0t s(t )e j0t F 2 2 1 S ( 0 ) S ( 0 ) 2 Sa () S ( 0 ) S ( ) output: 0 0 EXERCISE: Show that the energy of pulses and the power of random waveforms is preserved between the real and complex domains.Therefore, the energies and powers are unafffected by up/down conversion 57 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright Elements of electro-magnetic wave propagation (the least background for this course -mainly brought here to establish notation) WHOLE SECTION IS SELF-STUDY (REVIEW OF KNOWN MATERIAL FROM PRIOR COURSES) Maxwell’s equations In the absence of sources ( J0 E t ( H ) H t ( E) ( E) 0 ( H) 0 ): f t f , t Divergence: v x vx y v y z vz Rotor (curl): v xˆ y vz z v y E( x, y, z , t ) Electric Field H( x, y, z, t ) Magnetic Field permittivity Moshe Nazarathy Copyright [ x , y , z ] permeability yˆ z vx x vz zˆ x v y y vx 59 Simple media (linear, homogeneous, isotropic) Linear: , independent of E, H Homogeneous: ( x, y, z, t ) (t ) ( x, y, z, t ) (t ) Isotropic: , are scalars, not tensors (matrices). E t ( H ) Maxwell’s equations H t ( E) ( E) 0 ( H) 0 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright Note: D E B H 60 self-study Wave equations in simple media E 0 0 ( E) E E t ( H) Maxwell const Maxwell const; , t commute E { t ( H)} t ( H) t ( t ( E)) Vector Identity 2 2 ( E) E t E E t ( E) Maxwell 0 [ x , y , z ] Del s [ x s , y s , z s ] Gradient E ()E ( )E 2 1 2 v 2 x 2 y E E 0 2 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 2 t 2 z Laplacian Wave equation 61 Wave equations in simple media 1 2 E 2 t E 0 v 1 2 2 H 2 t H 0 v Wave equation 2 1 2 v (apply v is the speed of light in the medium. The speed of light in vacuum is denoted v c 1 on 2nd Maxwell’s eq.) Particular plane wave solutions (verify by substitution): E( x, y, z, t ) E0 g (t z / c) g () arbitrary H( x, y, z, t ) H0 g (t z / c) self-study E ( )E E 2 2 x 2 2 y 2 z Ev E 0 2 x Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 2 t 2 x 1-D wave equation 62 Wave equations in simple media 2 Ev E 0 2 2 t Wave equation in 1-D: Moshe Nazarathy Copyright z / v) E ( )E E 2 Laplacian: Verify: Wave equation E( x, y, z, t ) E0 g (t Verify solution: self-study 2 x 2 y 2 z 2 2 z Ec E 0 2 z 2 2 t g (t z / c) c g (t z / c) 2 z 2 t 63 Wave equations in simple media 2 Ev E 0 2 2 t self-study Wave equation View time evolution at location z (connect scope to antenna at z): t-waveform at z=0 is delayed by z / c when received at z Interpet solution: E( z, t ) E0 g (t z / c) E(0, t z / c) Travelling wave z 0 z View all space at t (spatial snapshot at an instance t): z-profile at t=0 is delayed by zt E( z, t ) E0 g s ( z vt ) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright vt z gs ( z) g ( ) v when observed at t 64 self-study Wave equations - time-harmonic solutions E( z, t ) E0 g (t z / v) E0 g s ( z vt ) g (t ) cos(t ) sinusoidal profiles z c E( z, t ) E0 cos (t ) ) v wavenumber =phaseshift E( z, t ) E0 cos[t z ] Delaying a sinusoid by generates phaseshift cos (t ) ) cos t ) Time evolution at location z: sinusoidal with frequency (time period z / v ( / v ) z z T 2 / ) Spatial snapshot at an instance t: sinusoidal with spatial frequency (spatial period Moshe Nazarathy Copyright per unit length A distance z generates delay z/v, and phaseshift 2 / ) 65 self-study Wave equations - time-harmonic solutions E( z, t ) E0 cos[t z ] Time evolution at location z: sinusoidal with frequency (time period T 2 / ) Spatial snapshot at an instance t: sinusoidal with spatial frequency (spatial period 2 rad c m Spatial (angular) frequency Wavenumber k-vector Propagation constant Phase constant (phase/length) v T 2 2 f T ) rad sec Temporal (angular) frequency c vT f v Phase velocity in material Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 2 / 1 Wavelength (spatial period) [m] 2 [rad ] c 1 z 2 0 0 Phase velocity in vacuum 66 self-study Phase velocity, refractive index E( z, t ) E0 cos[t z ] v T 1 Phase velocity in material v , 0 : v Phase velocity in vacuum (with , ): c 0 0 Phase velocity in material with Refractive index: (velocity slowdown factor) c n v v0 1 0 0 Phase velocity in vacuum 1/ 0 0 0 1/ 0 r n 0 2 Relative permittivity: Moshe Nazarathy Copyright r 1 susceptibilityP 0 E 67 Material dispersion relation self-study E( z, t ) E0 cos[t z ] c 0 Refractive index: n (velocity slowdown factor) v 0 2 n n 0 v c/n c v Wavenumber in the material ( ) nk0 n c 2 0 k0 Material dispersion relation 0 c Vacuum wavenumber Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 68 Harmonic plane wave propagation Note: linearly polarized, else phases of the components would be different Real optical (electric) field: E( z, t ) E0 cos[t z ] Representation in terms of analytic signal and complex envelope: E( z, t ) 2 Re E0e j (t z ) jt 2 Re e Ee analytic signal Ea ( z , t ) j z E( z, t ) temporal complex-envelope real-valued E E0e j Spatio-temporal complex-envelope Similarly, for the magnetic field: H( z, t ) Re H0e Moshe Nazarathy Copyright j ( t z ) jt Re e He j z 69 Maxwell’s equations time-harmonic (monochromatic) formulation jt E( z, t ) Re e E( x, y, z ) jt H( z, t ) Re e H( x, y, z ) E t ( H ) H t ( E) ( E) 0 ( H) 0 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright E j H H j E E 0 H 0 70 Wave equation - time-harmonic formulation E( z, t ) 2 Re e jt E( x, y , z ) H( z, t ) 2 Re e jt H( x, y , z ) 1 2 E 2 t E 0 v 1 2 2 H 2 t H 0 v 2 2E k2 E 0 H k H 0 2 2 Time-harmonic (Helmholtz) wave equations Moshe Nazarathy Copyright E j H H j E E 0 Simple media H 0 1 2 1 2 2 t 2 ( j ) k 2 v v v 2 wavenumber (in a medium): k v 1 / Alternative proof: E j H j ( j E) 2 E ( E) 2E k2 E 71 Wave equation - time-harmonic solutions (I) 2 E k 2 E 0 Time-harmonic wave equations 2 H k 2 H 0 Example 1: Harmonic plane wave in a simple medium (along the z-axis): Assume uniform solution in the x-y plane: E( x, y, z, t ) Re e jt E( z ) H( x, y, z, t ) Re e jt H( z ) Ek E 0 2E ( 2x 2y 2z )E 2z E Hk H 0 2H ( 2x 2y 2z )H 2z H 2 z 2 z 2 2 E E0e jkz E( z, t ) Re Ee j (t kz ) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright H H 0e jkz H( z, t ) Re He j (t kz ) 72 Modeling loss (I) Harmonic plane wave in a simple lossy medium Ek E 0 2 z 2 E E0e Hk H 0 2 z 2 H He jkz E( z, t ) Re E0e j (t kz ) Loss is modeled by complexifying jkz H( z, t ) Re He j (t kz ) , n, k - the imaginary part is associated with the loss j re k n k0 n Moshe Nazarathy Copyright n nre jnim 0 im c n re c jn im c j 73 Modeling loss (II) Note: measure E in units 2 such that P E( z ) Harmonic plane wave in a simple lossy medium E Ee Ek E 0 2 z 2 Hk H 0 2 z 2 jkz j Right-propagating wave: E Ee jkz Ee Phase-shift j ( j ) z Ee P( z ) E( z ) E( z ) P(0)e 2 2 j z z 2 z e Attenuation Attenuation is exponential in z here When power is measured in dB, the power is linear decreasing in z 10log P( z ) P( z )[dB] P0[dB] 2[ dB / km ] z[ km ] Moshe Nazarathy Copyright Exercise: Relate [ dB / km ] , 74 Guided wave optics Wave equation - time-harmonic solutions (II) Ek E 0 2 2 2 H k 2 H 0 Time-harmonic (Helmholtz) wave equations x z y Example 2: Lossless waveguide / fiber (along the z-axis): Assume separable solution: general x-y pattern times z-harmonic variation t- and z-harmonic solutions E( x, y, z, t ) Re E( x, y )e j z e jt H( x, y, z, t ) Re H( x, y )e j z e jt 2x 2y 2E 2E( x, y)e j z (2x 2y 2z )E( x, y)e j z (T2 ( j )2 )E( x, y)e j z T2 E 2E k 2E 0 H Hk H0 2 T 2 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 2 76 Guided wave solutions of the wave equation (I) Note: As assumed in our wave eq. derivation, we consider piecewise homogeneous media, and further assume cylindrical geometry along z: n ( x, y, z ) n ( x, y ) x k k ( x, y) piecewise constant ! z CORE y CLADDING Lossless waveguide / fiber (along the z-axis): “modes” E( x, y, z, t ) Re E( x, y )e j (t z ) H( x, y, z, t ) Re H( x, y )e j (t z ) Boundary conditions stitch together the solutions in the various piecewise constant regions (enforcing the same ) k c 0 E( x, y ) (k )E( x, y ) 0 E,H tangential & normal are continuous 2 2 2 at the interfaces T H( x, y ) (k )H( x, y ) 0 2 T 2 2 “Transverse” wave equations for the modes Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 77 Guided wave solutions of the wave equation (II) For consistent guidance k k ( x, y ) ncore nclad x c0 n ( x, y ) n ( x, y) piecewise constant ! ncore CLADDING nclad z CORE y Lossless waveguide / fiber (along the z-axis): “modes” E( x, y, z, t ) Re E( x, y )e j (t z ) H( x, y, z, t ) Re H( x, y )e j (t z ) Typically, the eigenspectrum of allowed -s is discrete The m-th eigen-solution (at a fixed ) is described by m ( ), Em ( x, y ), H m ( x, y ) T2 k2 ( x, y ) E( x, y ) 2 E( x, y ) T2 k2 ( x, y ) H( x, y ) 2 H( x, y ) In the core the transverse fields typically oscillate. In the cladding the fields decay away from the axis (evanscent) “Transverse” wave equation expressed as an eigenvalue problem (analogous to Shroedinger’s eq.) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 78 Guided wave solutions of the wave equation (III) x z y Example 2: Lossless waveguide / fiber (along the z-axis): Ex “modes” E( x, y, z, t ) Re E( x, y )e j (t z ) H( x, y, z, t ) Re H( x, y )e j ( t z ) MODES OF A MULTI-MODE FIBER (courtesy: Maxim Greenberg) The eigenspectrum of -s means the various modes propagate with different speeds – modal dispersion: pulses get smeared, causing ISI degradation SINGLE-MODE fiber is used for long-haul optical communication (sufficiently reducing the core diameter, just a single-mode is supported) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright ncore CLADDING nclad CORE Ey Ez I m=2 p=2 m=2 p=1 m=0 p=2 m=0 p=1 m=2 p=2 m=2 p=1 m=4 p=2 m=4 p=1 79 Single-mode fiber Mecozzi ECOC’05 Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 80 Single-mode fiber (II) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 81 Solving the wave equation for rotationally symmetric step-index fibers WHOLE SECTION IS SELF-STUDY (elements of it covered in TA class) Moshe Nazarathy Copyright 82 Wave propagation in optical fibers Maxwell equations in differential form B t D XH t D0 D 0 E P B 0 B 0 H XE The polarization and electric field are linearly dependent P ( r, t ) 0 ( r, t t ') E ( r, t ')dt ' B D X XE X t t t 2 1 2 E 2 P 2 0 E P 2 2 2 t c t t Fourier transformation of E and P E ( r, ) 0 E ( r, t ) exp(it )dt, P( r, ) 0 P( r, t ) exp(it )dt and substituting leads to X XE 2 c 2 2 c2 E ( r, ) 0 2 0 ( r, ) E ( r, ) E ( r, ) 1 ( r, ) ( r, ) 2 c 2 E ( r, ) (r, ) 1 (r, ) Is defined as the complex frequency dependent Dielectric constant ( r, ) ( n i c / 2 ) 2 n 1 Re Refractive index nc Im Absorption (loss) n and frequency dependent. The solution to the propagation problem is vastly simplified by introducing the so called Gloge Approximation which assumes that I 0 or = n2 II) n is independent of r or n = 0 Using the identity X XE ( E ) 2 E 2 E E D 0 Leads to the wave equation E n 2 2 2 ()k0 E 0 k0 / c 2 / 0 In cylindrical coordinates, the equation for Ez (for example) is 2 Ez 1 Ez 1 2 Ez 2 Ez 2 2 n k0 Ez 0 2 2 2 2 r r r r z n1 r a n n2 r a There are similar equations for E Er Hz H Hr. Only two need to be solved The wave equation is solved by separation of variables Ez (r, , z ) F (r )( ) Z ( z) This leads to three regular differential equations 2Z Z 0 2 z 2 m 0 2 Z exp(i z ) exp(im ) (m integer) 2 F 1 F 2 2 m2 2 n k0 2 2 r r r r F 0 Solution to the equation for F(r) AJ m ( r ) AYm ( r ) r a F (r ) CK m ( r ) C I m ( r ) r a with 2 n12 k02 2 2 2 n22 k02 k0 2 0 Jm, Ym, Km, Im are Bessel functions and A,A’,C,C’ are constants The field has to be finite at r 0 and zero for large r The field Ez becomes then AJ m ( r ) exp(im ) exp(i z ) r a Ez ( r ) CKm ( r ) exp(im ) exp(i z ) r a Similarly for Hz BJ m ( r ) exp(im ) exp(i z ) r a H z (r) DKm ( r ) exp(im ) exp(i z ) r a The form of the Bessel functions is 10 1 J0(x) J1(x) J2(x) K0(x) K1(x) K2(x) 9 8 7 0.5 6 5 4 0 3 2 1 -0.5 0 1 2 3 4 5 x 6 7 8 9 10 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 x 2 2.5 3 The Maxwell equations are used to calculate the four other field components i E z H z Er 2 0 r r i E z H z E 2 0 r r i H z 2 E z Hr 2 0n r r i H z 2 E z H 2 0n r r There are now six equations describing all the fields in the core and in the cladding. There are four coefficients A B C D which need to be computed. The coefficients are found using the boundary condition E z E H z H need to be continuous at r a The boundary conditions yield four equations which have to be satisfied simultaneously. The determinant of this set of equations is set to zero and this leads to the important Eigenvalue Equation for the propagation constant J m ( a ) Km ( a ) J m ( a ) n22 K m ( a ) 2 J m ( a ) K m ( a ) J m ( a ) n1 K m ( a ) 2 m 1 1 2 2 n1ak0 2 J m J m ( a ) [ a ] The Eigenvalue equation is cumbersome relative to the case of a dielectric slab. Even for the dielectric slab, the solutions are not intuitive and have to be found numerically and some times graphically. Given a fiber and an operating wavelength, n1 n2 a, k0 the Eigenvalue equation can be solved (at least numerically) to yield the propagation constant for the specific mode solved for. The solutions are periodic in m and are counted successively so a mode is labeled mn n = 1, 2, 1 . . . Each mn represents a field distribution described by the six field equations. In general Ez and Hz are non zero, except for the case of m = 0. The modes are labeled HEmn or EHmn and for m=0, TE0n or TM0n. Some times the modes are labeled LPmn Define modal index n / k0 n1 n n2 A given mode with a given defines n and this is the index that mode experiences. For example n established the phase velocity of that mode. When n changes, say because the wavelength (and therefore k0) changes the mode may reach cut off n n2 Cut off The mode is no more guided. For a propagating mode, the field changes in the cladding According to Km ( r ) exp( r ) 2 r r 1 At cut off n n2 2 0 and hence there is no exponential field reduction and no guiding. At cut off k0 (n12 n22 ) Normalized Frequency V 2 Define V k0a (n12 n22 an1 2 V is proportional to or 1/ or k0 Normalized propagation constant b Define b / k0 n1 n2 n n2 n1 n2 B versus V Given a frequency or wavelength, V is completely defines for a given fiber A large V number yield many modes A very approximate and crude rule of thumb states that the number of modes is V2/2 For small V numbers the number of modes is small, V = 5 yields 7 modes The most important case is that for which there is only one mode Single Mode Conditions A single mode, HE11 is obtained when all other, higher, modes are cut off. Inserting m = 0 in the Eigenvalue equation Cut off in the TE0n modes J 0 ( a ) K0 ( a ) J 0 ( a ) K0 ( a ) 0 Cut off in the TM0n modes n22 J 0 ( a) K0 ( a) n22 J 0 ( a)K0 ( a) 0 For 0 J 0 ( a ) 0 J 0 (V ) 0 The properties of the Bessel function dictate that the V value for which J 0 (V ) 0 is V 2.405 The condition for single mode operation is therefore V 2.405 For V 2.405, the only propagating mode is the TE11 A standard single mode fiber designed for 1.3 m-1.6 m has a cut off at 1.2 m. For n1 1.45, =5 103 and V 2.405, a 3.2 m Modal index n n2 b( n1 n2 ) n2 (1 b ) Approximate (empirical) expression for b(V ) 2 0.996 b(V ) 1.428 V in the range V 1.5 2.5, b(V ) is accurate to within 0.2% Field distribution The fundamental mode of the fiber is such that in general it is linearly polarized along Ex or Ey. For Ex [ J 0 (r ) / J 0 (a)[exp( iz ) r a E x E0 K 0 (r ) / K 0 (a)[exp( iz ) r a 1/ 2 0 H y n2 0 Ex Actually, there always exists another mode Ey and in theory the two modes have the same Spot size The basic field distribution is a Bessel function for which is it hard to develop a simple intuitive picture. The field distribution can be approximated by a Gaussian so that r2 exp( iz ) E x A exp W2 W is the spot size W and a are related by a formula w 0.65 1.619V 3 / 2 2.879V 6 a Also, the spot size determines the confinement factor a drr 2 Ex 2a 2 Pcore 0 1 exp w2 Ptotal 2 drr E x 0